7,370 research outputs found
Power filtration of CMB observational data
We propose a power filter Gp for linear reconstruction of the CMB signal from
observational maps. This Gp filter preserves the power spectrum of the CMB
signal in contrast to the Wiener filter which diminishes the power spectrum of
the reconstructed CMB signal. We demonstrate how peak statistics and a cluster
analysis can be used to estimate the probability of the presence of a CMB
signal in observational records. The efficiency of the Gp filter is
demonstrated on a toy model of an observational record consisting of a CMB
signal and noise in the form of foreground point sources.Comment: 17 pages; 4 figures; submitted to International Journal of Modern
Physic
The Star Blended with the MOA-2008-BLG-310 Source Is Not the Exoplanet Host Star
High resolution Hubble Space Telescope (HST) image analysis of the
MOA-2008-BLG-310 microlens system indicates that the excess flux at the
location of the source found in the discovery paper cannot primarily be due to
the lens star because it does not match the lens-source relative proper motion,
, predicted by the microlens models. This excess flux is most
likely to be due to an unrelated star that happens to be located in close
proximity to the source star. Two epochs of HST observations indicate proper
motion for this blend star that is typical of a random bulge star, but is not
consistent with a companion to the source or lens stars if the flux is
dominated by only one star, aside from the lens. We consider models in which
the excess flux is due to a combination of an unrelated star and the lens star,
and this yields 95\% confidence level upper limit on the lens star brightness
of and . A Bayesian analysis using a standard
Galactic model and these magnitude limits yields a host star mass , a planet mass of at a projected separation of AU. This result illustrates excess flux in a high
resolution image of a microlens-source system need not be due to the lens. It
is important to check that the lens-source relative proper motion is consistent
with the microlensing prediction. The high resolution image analysis techniques
developed in this paper can be used to verify the WFIRST exoplanet microlensing
survey mass measurements.Comment: Submitted to AJ on March 18, 201
A Search for Stellar Obscuration Events due to Dark Clouds
The recent detections of a large population of faint submillimetre sources,
an excess halo gamma-ray background, and the extreme scattering events observed
for extragalactic radio sources have been explained as being due to baryonic
dark matter in the form of small, dark, gas clouds. In this paper we present
the results of a search for the transient stellar obscurations such clouds are
expected to cause. We examine the Macho project light curves of 48 x 10^6 stars
toward the Galactic bulge, LMC and SMC for the presence of dark cloud
extinction events. We find no evidence for the existence of a population of
dark gas clouds with Av > 0.2 and masses between ~ 10^-4 and 10^-2 M_solar in
the Galactic disk or halo. However, it is possible that such dark cloud
populations could exist if they are clustered in regions away from the observed
lines of sight.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, submitted to Ap
Computing CMB Anisotropy in Compact Hyperbolic Spaces
The measurements of CMB anisotropy have opened up a window for probing the
global topology of the universe on length scales comparable to and beyond the
Hubble radius. For compact topologies, the two main effects on the CMB are: (1)
the breaking of statistical isotropy in characteristic patterns determined by
the photon geodesic structure of the manifold and (2) an infrared cutoff in the
power spectrum of perturbations imposed by the finite spatial extent. We
present a completely general scheme using the regularized method of images for
calculating CMB anisotropy in models with nontrivial topology, and apply it to
the computationally challenging compact hyperbolic topologies. This new
technique eliminates the need for the difficult task of spatial eigenmode
decomposition on these spaces. We estimate a Bayesian probability for a
selection of models by confronting the theoretical pixel-pixel temperature
correlation function with the COBE-DMR data. Our results demonstrate that
strong constraints on compactness arise: if the universe is small compared to
the `horizon' size, correlations appear in the maps that are irreconcilable
with the observations. If the universe is of comparable size, the likelihood
function is very dependent upon orientation of the manifold wrt the sky. While
most orientations may be strongly ruled out, it sometimes happens that for a
specific orientation the predicted correlation patterns are preferred over the
conventional infinite models.Comment: 15 pages, LaTeX (IOP style included), 3 color figures (GIF) in
separate files. Minor revision to match the version accepted in Class.
Quantum Grav.: Proc. of Topology and Cosmology, Cleveland, 1997. The paper
can be also downloaded from
http://www.cita.utoronto.ca/~pogosyan/cwru_proc.ps.g
The long-period Galactic Cepheid RS Puppis - III. A geometric distance from HST polarimetric imaging of its light echoes
As one of the most luminous Cepheids in the Milky Way, the 41.5-day RS Puppis
is an analog of the long-period Cepheids used to measure extragalactic
distances. An accurate distance to this star would therefore help anchor the
zero-point of the bright end of the period-luminosity relation. But, at a
distance of about 2 kpc, RS Pup is too far away for measuring a direct
trigonometric parallax with a precision of a few percent with existing
instrumentation. RS Pup is unique in being surrounded by a reflection nebula,
whose brightness varies as pulses of light from the Cepheid propagate outwards.
We present new polarimetric imaging of the nebula obtained with HST/ACS. The
derived map of the degree of linear polarization pL allows us to reconstruct
the three-dimensional structure of the dust distribution. To retrieve the
scattering angle from the pL value, we consider two different polarization
models, one based on a Milky Way dust mixture and one assuming Rayleigh
scattering. Considering the derived dust distribution in the nebula, we adjust
a model of the phase lag of the photometric variations over selected nebular
features to retrieve the distance of RS Pup. We obtain a distance of 1910 +/-
80 pc (4.2%), corresponding to a parallax of 0.524 +/- 0.022 mas. The agreement
between the two polarization models we considered is good, but the final
uncertainty is dominated by systematics in the adopted model parameters. The
distance we obtain is consistent with existing measurements from the
literature, but light echoes provide a distance estimate that is not subject to
the same systematic uncertainties as other estimators (e.g. the Baade-Wesselink
technique). RS Pup therefore provides an important fiducial for the calibration
of systematic uncertainties of the long-period Cepheid distance scale.Comment: 14 pages, 14 figures, accepted for publication in Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Planetary Microlensing at High Magnification
Simulations of planetary microlensing at high magnification that were carried
out on a cluster computer are presented. It was found that the perturbations
due to two-thirds of all planets occur in the time interval [-0.5t_FWHM, 0.5t_
FWHM] with respect to the peak of the microlensing light curve, where t_FWHM is
typically about 14 hours. This implies that only this restricted portion of the
light curve need be intensively monitored for planets, a very significant
practical advantage. Nearly all planetary detections in high magnification
events will not involve caustic crossings. We discuss the issues involved in
determining the planetary parameters in high magnification microlensing events.
Earth mass planets may be detected with 1-m class telescopes if their projected
orbital radii lie within about 1.5 - 2.5 AU. Giant planets are detectable over
a much larger region. For multi-planet systems the perturbations due to
individual planets can be separated under certain conditions. The size of the
source star needs to be determined independently, but the presence of spots on
the source star is likely to be negligible, as is the effect of planetary
motion during an event.Comment: 12 pages, 13 embedded figures, accepted for publication by MNRA
Vascular self-healing within carbon fibre reinforced polymer stringer run-out configurations
Stringer debonding within stiffened, assembled aerospace structures is one of the most critical damage scenarios that can occur in such structures. As a result, a degree of redundancy is inherently built-in to the design process of skin-stringer configurations to mitigate against premature and in-service failure. Introducing a âself-healingâ solution for stringer run-out configurations has the benefit of mitigating and controlling damage initiation, and by introducing this concept there is great potential to reduce excessive conservative safety margins that could ultimately lead to more lightweight designs. Vascular self-healing technology has been successfully implemented into a simplified strap lap specimen, showing that the introduction of a vascular microchannel reduces the strength by 15% but has little effect on the stiffness. Upon delivery and cure of epoxy-based self-healing agents full recovery of the mechanical properties was observed. This self-healing approach has been further implemented into industrially relevant, larger stringer run-out panels as a feasibility study, in which no knockdown to mechanical properties caused by the embedded vascular microchannels has been observed, this study has also shown similar promising results in terms of performance recovery.</p
Are Small Hyperbolic Universes Observationally Detectable?
Using recent observational constraints on cosmological density parameters,
together with recent mathematical results concerning small volume hyperbolic
manifolds, we argue that, by employing pattern repetitions, the topology of
nearly flat small hyperbolic universes can be observationally undetectable.
This is important in view of the facts that quantum cosmology may favour
hyperbolic universes with small volumes, and from the expectation coming from
inflationary scenarios, that is likely to be very close to one.Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, LaTeX2e. A reference and two footnotes added. To
appear in Class. Quantum Grav. 18 (2001) in the present for
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