2,703 research outputs found
False positive probabilties for all Kepler Objects of Interest: 1284 newly validated planets and 428 likely false positives
We present astrophysical false positive probability calculations for every
Kepler Object of Interest (KOI)---the first large-scale demonstration of a
fully automated transiting planet validation procedure. Out of 7056 KOIs, we
determine that 1935 have probabilities <1% to be astrophysical false positives,
and thus may be considered validated planets. 1284 of these have not yet been
validated or confirmed by other methods. In addition, we identify 428 KOIs
likely to be false positives that have not yet been identified as such, though
some of these may be a result of unidentified transit timing variations. A side
product of these calculations is full stellar property posterior samplings for
every host star, modeled as single, binary, and triple systems. These
calculations use 'vespa', a publicly available Python package able to be easily
applied to any transiting exoplanet candidate.Comment: 20 pages, 8 figures. Published in ApJ. Instructions to reproduce
results can be found at https://github.com/timothydmorton/koi-fp
Delayed X-ray brightening accompanied by variable ionized absorption following a tidal disruption event
Supermassive black holes can experience super-Eddington peak mass fallback
rates following the tidal disruption of a star. The theoretical expectation is
that part of the infalling material is expelled by means of an accretion disk
wind, whose observational signature includes blueshifted absorption lines of
highly ionized species in X-ray spectra. To date, however, only one such
ultra-fast outflow (UFO) has been reported in the tidal disruption event (TDE)
ASASSN-14li. Here we report on the discovery of transient absorption-like
signatures in X-ray spectra of the TDE AT2020ksf/Gaia20cjk (at a redshift of
=0.092), following an X-ray brightening days after UV/optical
peak. We find that while no statistically significant absorption features are
present initially, they appear on a timescale of several days, and remain
detected up to 770 days after peak. Simple thermal continuum models, combined
with a power-law or neutral absorber, do not describe these features well.
Adding a partial covering, low velocity ionized absorber improves the fit at
early times, but fails at late times. A high velocity (v 42000 km
s, or -0.15c), ionized absorber (ultra-fast outflow) provides a good fit
to all data. The few day timescale of variability is consistent with
expectations for a clumpy wind. We discuss several scenarios that could explain
the X-ray delay, as well as the potential for larger scale wind feedback. The
serendipitous nature of the discovery could suggest a high incidence of UFOs in
TDEs, alleviating some of the tension with theoretical expectations.Comment: 14 pages + appendices, accepted for publication in Ap
Thrombin-induced events in non-platelet cells are mediated by the unique proteolytic mechanism established for the cloned platelet thrombin receptor.
We recently isolated a cDNA clone encoding a functional platelet thrombin receptor that defined a unique mechanism of receptor activation. Thrombin cleaves its receptor's extracellular amino terminal extension, unmasking a new amino terminus that functions as a tethered peptide ligand and activates the receptor. A novel peptide mimicking this new amino terminus was a full agonist for platelet secretion and aggregation, suggesting that this unusual mechanism accounts for platelet activation by thrombin. Does this mechanism also mediate thrombin's assorted actions on non-platelet cells? We now report that the novel thrombin receptor agonist peptide reproduces thrombin-induced events (specifically, phosphoinositide hydrolysis and mitogenesis) in CCL-39 hamster lung fibroblasts, a naturally thrombin-responsive cell line. Moreover, these thrombin-induced events could be recapitulated in CV-1 cells, normally poorly responsive to thrombin, after transfection with human platelet thrombin receptor cDNA. Our data show that important thrombin-induced cellular events are mediated by the same unusual mechanism of receptor activation in both platelets and fibroblasts, very likely via the same or very similar receptors
Identification of long-duration noise transients in LIGO and Virgo
The LIGO and Virgo detectors are sensitive to a variety of noise sources,
such as instrumental artifacts and environmental disturbances. The Stochastic
Transient Analysis Multi-detector Pipeline (STAMP) has been developed to search
for long-duration (t1s) gravitational-wave (GW) signals. This pipeline
can also be used to identify environmental noise transients. Here we present an
algorithm to determine when long-duration noise sources couple into the
interferometers, as well as identify what these noise sources are. We analyze
the cross-power between a GW strain channel and an environmental sensor, using
pattern recognition tools to identify statistically significant structure in
cross-power time-frequency maps. We identify interferometer noise from
airplanes, helicopters, thunderstorms and other sources. Examples from LIGO's
sixth science run, S6, and Virgo's third scientific run, VSR3, are presented.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, Gravitational-wave Physics & Astronomy Worksho
Seismic topographic scattering in the context of GW detector site selection
In this paper, we present a calculation of seismic scattering from irregular
surface topography in the Born approximation. Based on US-wide topographic
data, we investigate topographic scattering at specific sites to demonstrate
its impact on Newtonian-noise estimation and subtraction for future
gravitational-wave detectors. We find that topographic scattering at a
comparatively flat site in Oregon would not pose any problems, whereas
scattering at a second site in Montana leads to significant broadening of wave
amplitudes in wavenumber space that would make Newtonian-noise subtraction very
challenging. Therefore, it is shown that topographic scattering should be
included as criterion in the site-selection process of future low-frequency
gravitational-wave detectors.Comment: 16 pages, 7 figure
Measuring Transit Signal Recovery in the Kepler Pipeline. III. Completeness of the Q1-Q17 DR24 Planet Candidate Catalogue, with Important Caveats for Occurrence Rate Calculations
With each new version of the Kepler pipeline and resulting planet candidate
catalogue, an updated measurement of the underlying planet population can only
be recovered with an corresponding measurement of the Kepler pipeline detection
efficiency. Here, we present measurements of the sensitivity of the pipeline
(version 9.2) used to generate the Q1-Q17 DR24 planet candidate catalog
(Coughlin et al. 2016). We measure this by injecting simulated transiting
planets into the pixel-level data of 159,013 targets across the entire Kepler
focal plane, and examining the recovery rate. Unlike previous versions of the
Kepler pipeline, we find a strong period dependence in the measured detection
efficiency, with longer (>40 day) periods having a significantly lower
detectability than shorter periods, introduced in part by an incorrectly
implemented veto. Consequently, the sensitivity of the 9.2 pipeline cannot be
cast as a simple one-dimensional function of the signal strength of the
candidate planet signal as was possible for previous versions of the pipeline.
We report on the implications for occurrence rate calculations based on the
Q1-Q17 DR24 planet candidate catalog and offer important caveats and
recommendations for performing such calculations. As before, we make available
the entire table of injected planet parameters and whether they were recovered
by the pipeline, enabling readers to derive the pipeline detection sensitivity
in the planet and/or stellar parameter space of their choice.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, full electronic version of Table 1 available at
the NASA Exoplanet Archive; accepted by ApJ May 2nd, 201
Central exclusive production of longlived gluinos at the LHC
We examine the possibility of producing gluino pairs at the LHC via the
exclusive reaction pp -> p+gluino+gluino+p in the case where the gluinos are
long lived. Such long lived gluinos are possible if the scalar super-partners
have large enough masses. We show that it may be possible to observe the
gluinos via their conversion to R-hadron jets and measure their mass to better
than 1% accuracy for masses below 350 GeV with 300/fb of data.Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures. Minor corrections to version
Observations of the GRB afterglow ATLAS17aeu and its possible association with GW170104
We report the discovery and multi-wavelength data analysis of the peculiar
optical transient, ATLAS17aeu. This transient was identified in the skymap of
the LIGO gravitational wave event GW170104 by our ATLAS and Pan-STARRS
coverage. ATLAS17aeu was discovered 23.1hrs after GW170104 and rapidly faded
over the next 3 nights, with a spectrum revealing a blue featureless continuum.
The transient was also detected as a fading x-ray source by Swift and in the
radio at 6 and 15 GHz. A gamma ray burst GRB170105A was detected by 3
satellites 19.04hrs after GW170104 and 4.10hrs before our first optical
detection. We analyse the multi-wavelength fluxes in the context of the known
GRB population and discuss the observed sky rates of GRBs and their afterglows.
We find it statistically likely that ATLAS17aeu is an afterglow associated with
GRB170105A, with a chance coincidence ruled out at the 99\% confidence or
2.6. A long, soft GRB within a redshift range of would be consistent with all the observed multi-wavelength data. The
Poisson probability of a chance occurrence of GW170104 and ATLAS17aeu is
. This is the probability of a chance coincidence in 2D sky location
and in time. These observations indicate that ATLAS17aeu is plausibly a normal
GRB afterglow at significantly higher redshift than the distance constraint for
GW170104 and therefore a chance coincidence. However if a redshift of the faint
host were to place it within the GW170104 distance range, then physical
association with GW170104 should be considered.Comment: 16 pages, 6 figures, accepted to Ap
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