3,515 research outputs found
Hubble Space Telescope Weak-lensing Study of the Galaxy Cluster XMMU J2235.3-2557 at z=1.4: A Surprisingly Massive Galaxy Cluster when the Universe is One-third of its Current Age
We present a weak-lensing analysis of the z=1.4 galaxy cluster XMMU
J2235.3-2557, based on deep Advanced Camera for Surveys images. Despite the
observational challenge set by the high redshift of the lens, we detect a
substantial lensing signal at the >~ 8 sigma level. This clear detection is
enabled in part by the high mass of the cluster, which is verified by our both
parametric and non-parametric estimation of the cluster mass. Assuming that the
cluster follows a Navarro-Frenk-White mass profile, we estimate that the
projected mass of the cluster within r=1 Mpc is (8.5+-1.7) x 10^14 solar mass,
where the error bar includes the statistical uncertainty of the shear profile,
the effect of possible interloping background structures, the scatter in
concentration parameter, and the error in our estimation of the mean redshift
of the background galaxies. The high X-ray temperature 8.6_{-1.2}^{+1.3} keV of
the cluster recently measured with Chandra is consistent with this high lensing
mass. When we adopt the 1-sigma lower limit as a mass threshold and use the
cosmological parameters favored by the Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe
5-year (WMAP5) result, the expected number of similarly massive clusters at z
>~ 1.4 in the 11 square degree survey is N ~ 0.005. Therefore, the discovery of
the cluster within the survey volume is a rare event with a probability < 1%,
and may open new scenarios in our current understanding of cluster formation
within the standard cosmological model.Comment: Accepted to ApJ for publication. 40 pages and 14 figure
The Hubble Constant determined through an inverse distance ladder including quasar time delays and Type Ia supernovae
Context. The precise determination of the present-day expansion rate of the
Universe, expressed through the Hubble constant , is one of the most
pressing challenges in modern cosmology. Assuming flat CDM,
inference at high redshift using cosmic-microwave-background data from Planck
disagrees at the 4.4 level with measurements based on the local
distance ladder made up of parallaxes, Cepheids and Type Ia supernovae (SNe
Ia), often referred to as "Hubble tension". Independent,
cosmological-model-insensitive ways to infer are of critical importance.
Aims. We apply an inverse-distance-ladder approach, combining strong-lensing
time-delay-distance measurements with SN Ia data. By themselves, SNe Ia are
merely good relative distance indicators, but by anchoring them to strong
gravitational lenses one can obtain an measurement that is relatively
insensitive to other cosmological parameters. Methods. A cosmological parameter
estimate is performed for different cosmological background models, both for
strong-lensing data alone and for the combined lensing + SNe Ia data sets.
Results. The cosmological-model dependence of strong-lensing measurements
is significantly mitigated through the inverse distance ladder. In combination
with SN Ia data, the inferred consistently lies around 73-74 km s
Mpc, regardless of the assumed cosmological background model. Our
results agree nicely with those from the local distance ladder, but there is a
>2 tension with Planck results, and a ~1.5 discrepancy with
results from an inverse distance ladder including Planck, Baryon Acoustic
Oscillations and SNe Ia. Future strong-lensing distance measurements will
reduce the uncertainties in from our inverse distance ladder.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, A&A letters accepted versio
Scaling Relations and Overabundance of Massive Clusters at z>~1 from Weak-Lensing Studies with HST
We present weak gravitational lensing analysis of 22 high-redshift (z >~1)
clusters based on Hubble Space Telescope images. Most clusters in our sample
provide significant lensing signals and are well detected in their
reconstructed two-dimensional mass maps. Combining the current results and our
previous weak-lensing studies of five other high-z clusters, we compare
gravitational lensing masses of these clusters with other observables. We
revisit the question whether the presence of the most massive clusters in our
sample is in tension with the current LambdaCDM structure formation paradigm.
We find that the lensing masses are tightly correlated with the gas
temperatures and establish, for the first time, the lensing mass-temperature
relation at z >~ 1. For the power law slope of the M-TX relation (M propto
T^{\alpha}), we obtain \alpha=1.54 +/- 0.23. This is consistent with the
theoretical self-similar prediction \alpha=3/2 and with the results previously
reported in the literature for much lower redshift samples. However, our
normalization is lower than the previous results by 20-30%, indicating that the
normalization in the M-TX relation might evolve. After correcting for Eddington
bias and updating the discovery area with a more conservative choice, we find
that the existence of the most massive clusters in our sample still provides a
tension with the current Lambda CDM model. The combined probability of finding
the four most massive clusters in this sample after marginalization over
current cosmological parameters is less than 1%.Comment: ApJ in press. See http://www.supernova.lbl.gov for additional
information pertaining to the HST Cluster SN Surve
MC: Subaru and Hubble Space Telescope Weak-Lensing Analysis of the Double Radio Relic Galaxy Cluster PLCK G287.0+32.9
The second most significant detection of the Planck Sunyaev Zel'dovich
survey, PLCK~G287.0+32.9 () boasts two similarly bright radio relics
and a radio halo. One radio relic is located kpc northwest of the
X-ray peak and the other Mpc to the southeast. This large difference
suggests that a complex merging scenario is required. A key missing puzzle for
the merging scenario reconstruction is the underlying dark matter distribution
in high resolution. We present a joint Subaru Telescope and {\it Hubble Space
Telescope} weak-lensing analysis of the cluster. Our analysis shows that the
mass distribution features four significant substructures. Of the
substructures, a primary cluster of mass
$M_{200\text{c}}=1.59^{+0.25}_{-0.22}\times 10^{15} \ h^{-1}_{70} \
\text{M}_{\odot}M_{200\text{c}}=1.16^{+0.15}_{-0.13}\times 10^{14} \ h^{-1}_{70} \
\text{M}_{\odot}\sim 400\sim 2M_{200\text{c}}=1.68^{+0.22}_{-0.20}\times
10^{14} \ h^{-1}_{70} \ \text{M}_{\odot}M_{200\text{c}}=1.87^{+0.24}_{-0.22}\times 10^{14} \ h^{-1}_{70} \
\text{M}_{\odot}$, is northwest of the X-ray peak and beyond the NW radio
relic.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures; Accepted to Ap
Galaxy-Mass Correlations on 10 Mpc Scales in the Deep Lens Survey
We examine the projected correlation of galaxies with mass from small scales
(<few hundred kpc) where individual dark matter halos dominate, out to 15 Mpc
where correlated large-scale structure dominates. We investigate these profiles
as a function of galaxy luminosity and redshift. Selecting 0.8 million galaxies
in the Deep Lens Survey, we use photometric redshifts and stacked weak
gravitational lensing shear tomography out to radial scales of 1 degree from
the centers of foreground galaxies. We detect correlated mass density from
multiple halos and large-scale structure at radii larger than the virial
radius, and find the first observational evidence for growth in the galaxy-mass
correlation on 10 Mpc scales with decreasing redshift and fixed range of
luminosity. For a fixed range of redshift, we find a scaling of projected halo
mass with rest-frame luminosity similar to previous studies at lower redshift.
We control systematic errors in shape measurement and photometric redshift,
enforce volume completeness through absolute magnitude cuts, and explore
residual sample selection effects via simulations.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, re-submitted to ApJ after addressing referee
comment
HST/Acs Weak-Lensing and Chandra X-Ray Studies of the High-Redshift Cluster MS 1054-0321
We present Hubble Space Telescope/Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS)
weak-lensing and Chandra X-ray analyses of MS 1054-0321 at z=0.83, the most
distant and X-ray luminous cluster in the Einstein Extended Medium-Sensitivity
Survey (EMSS). The high-resolution mass reconstruction through ACS weak-lensing
reveals the complicated dark matter substructure in unprecedented detail,
characterized by the three dominant mass clumps with the four or more minor
satellite groups within the current ACS field. The direct comparison of the
mass map with the Chandra X-ray image shows that the eastern weak-lensing
substructure is not present in the X-ray image and, more interestingly, the two
X-ray peaks are displaced away from the hypothesized merging direction with
respect to the corresponding central and western mass clumps, possibly because
of ram pressure. In addition, as observed in our previous weak-lensing study of
another high-redshift cluster CL 0152-1357 at z=0.84, the two dark matter
clumps of MS 1054-0321 seem to be offset from the galaxy counterparts. We
examine the significance of these offsets and discuss a possible scenario,
wherein the dark matter clumps might be moving ahead of the cluster galaxies.
The non-parametric weak-lensing mass modeling gives a projected mass of M(r<1
Mpc)=(1.02+-0.15)x 10^{15} solar mass, where the uncertainty reflects both the
statistical error and the cosmic shear effects. Our temperature measurement of
T=8.9_{-0.8}^{+1.0} keV utilizing the newest available low-energy quantum
efficiency degradation prescription for the Chandra instrument, together with
the isothermal beta description of the cluster (r_c=16"+-15" and
beta=0.78+-0.08), yields a projected mass of M(r<1 Mpc)=(1.2+-0.2) x 10^{15}
solar mass, consistent with the weak-lensing result.Comment: Accepted for publication in apj. Full-resolution version can be
downloaded from http://acs.pha.jhu.edu/~mkjee/ms1054.pd
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Urinary 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine as a biomarker of oxidative DNA damage in workers exposed to fine particulates.
Residual oil fly ash (ROFA) is a chemically complex mixture of compounds, including metals that are potentially carcinogenic because of their ability to cause oxidative injury. In this study, we investigated the association between exposure to particulate matter with an aerodynamic mass median diameter ≤ 2.5 micro m (PM2.5) and oxidative DNA damage and repair, as indicated by urinary 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG) concentrations, in a group of boilermakers exposed to ROFA and metal fumes. Twenty workers (50% smokers) were monitored for 5 days during an overhaul of oil-fired boilers. The median occupational PM2.5 8-hr time-weighted average was 0.44 mg/m3 (25th-75th percentile, 0.29-0.76). The mean ± SE creatinine-adjusted 8-OHdG levels were 13.26 ± 1.04 micro μg/g in urine samples collected pre-workshift and 15.22 ± 0.99 micro μg/g in the post-workshift samples. The urinary 8-OHdG levels were significantly greater in the post-workshift samples than in the pre-workshift samples (p = 0.02), after adjusting for urinary cotinine levels, chronic bronchitis status, and age. Linear mixed models indicated a significant exposure-response association between PM2.5 exposure and urinary 8-OHdG levels (p = 0.03). Each 1-mg/m3 incremental increase in PM2.5 exposure was associated with an increase of 1.67 micro μg/g (95% confidence interval, 0.21-3.14) in 8-OHdG levels. PM2.5 vanadium, manganese, nickel, and lead exposures also were positively associated with 8-OHdG levels (p ≤ 0.05). This study suggests that a relatively young and healthy cohort of boilermakers may experience an increased risk of developing oxidative DNA injury after exposure to high levels of metal-containing particulate matter
Towards Precision LSST Weak-Lensing Measurement - I: Impacts of Atmospheric Turbulence and Optical Aberration
The weak-lensing science of the LSST project drives the need to carefully
model and separate the instrumental artifacts from the intrinsic lensing
signal. The dominant source of the systematics for all ground based telescopes
is the spatial correlation of the PSF modulated by both atmospheric turbulence
and optical aberrations. In this paper, we present a full FOV simulation of the
LSST images by modeling both the atmosphere and the telescope optics with the
most current data for the telescope specifications and the environment. To
simulate the effects of atmospheric turbulence, we generated six-layer phase
screens with the parameters estimated from the on-site measurements. For the
optics, we combined the ray-tracing tool ZEMAX and our simulated focal plane
data to introduce realistic aberrations and focal plane height fluctuations.
Although this expected flatness deviation for LSST is small compared with that
of other existing cameras, the fast f-ratio of the LSST optics makes this focal
plane flatness variation and the resulting PSF discontinuities across the CCD
boundaries significant challenges in our removal of the systematics. We resolve
this complication by performing PCA CCD-by-CCD, and interpolating the basis
functions using conventional polynomials. We demonstrate that this PSF
correction scheme reduces the residual PSF ellipticity correlation below 10^-7
over the cosmologically interesting scale. From a null test using HST/UDF
galaxy images without input shear, we verify that the amplitude of the galaxy
ellipticity correlation function, after the PSF correction, is consistent with
the shot noise set by the finite number of objects. Therefore, we conclude that
the current optical design and specification for the accuracy in the focal
plane assembly are sufficient to enable the control of the PSF systematics
required for weak-lensing science with the LSST.Comment: Accepted to PASP. High-resolution version is available at
http://dls.physics.ucdavis.edu/~mkjee/LSST_weak_lensing_simulation.pd
Principal Component Analysis of the Time- and Position-Dependent Point Spread Function of the Advanced Camera for Surveys
We describe the time- and position-dependent point spread function (PSF)
variation of the Wide Field Channel (WFC) of the Advanced Camera for Surveys
(ACS) with the principal component analysis (PCA) technique. The time-dependent
change is caused by the temporal variation of the focus whereas the
position-dependent PSF variation in ACS/WFC at a given focus is mainly the
result of changes in aberrations and charge diffusion across the detector,
which appear as position-dependent changes in elongation of the astigmatic core
and blurring of the PSF, respectively. Using >400 archival images of star
cluster fields, we construct a ACS PSF library covering diverse environments of
the observations (e.g., focus values). We find that interpolation of a
small number () of principal components or ``eigen-PSFs'' per exposure
can robustly reproduce the observed variation of the ellipticity and size of
the PSF. Our primary interest in this investigation is the application of this
PSF library to precision weak-lensing analyses, where accurate knowledge of the
instrument's PSF is crucial. However, the high-fidelity of the model judged
from the nice agreement with observed PSFs suggests that the model is
potentially also useful in other applications such as crowded field stellar
photometry, galaxy profile fitting, AGN studies, etc., which similarly demand a
fair knowledge of the PSFs at objects' locations. Our PSF models, applicable to
any WFC image rectified with the Lanczos3 kernel, are publicly available.Comment: Accepted to PASP. To appear in December issue. Figures are degraded
to meet the size limit. High-resolution version can be downloaded at
http://acs.pha.jhu.edu/~mkjee/acs_psf/acspsf.pd
Star Formation Histories in a Cluster Environment at z~0.84
We present a spectrophotometric analysis of galaxies belonging to the
dynamically young, massive cluster RX J0152.7-1357 at z~0.84, aimed at
understanding the effects of the cluster environment on the star formation
history (SFH) of cluster galaxies and the assembly of the red-sequence (RS). We
use VLT/FORS spectroscopy, ACS/WFC optical and NTT/SofI near-IR data to
characterize SFHs as a function of color, luminosity, morphology, stellar mass,
and local environment from a sample of 134 spectroscopic members. In order to
increase the signal-to-noise, individual galaxy spectra are stacked according
to these properties. Moreover, the D4000, Balmer, CN3883, Fe4383 and C4668
indices are also quantified. The SFH analysis shows that galaxies in the blue
faint-end of the RS have on average younger stars (Delta t ~ 2 Gyr) than those
in the red bright-end. We also found, for a given luminosity range, differences
in age (Delta t ~ 0.5 - 1.3 Gyr) as a function of color, indicating that the
intrinsic scatter of the RS may be due to age variations. Passive galaxies in
the blue faint-end of the RS are preferentially located in the low density
areas of the cluster, likely being objects entering the RS from the "blue
cloud". It is likely that the quenching of the star formation of these RS
galaxies is due to interaction with the intracluster medium. Furthermore, the
SFH of galaxies in the RS as a function of stellar mass reveals signatures of
"downsizing" in the overall cluster.Comment: 36 pages, 5 tables, 14 figures. Accepted for publication in The
Astrophysical Journa
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