704 research outputs found
Optimal Techniques in Two-dimensional Spectroscopy: Background Subtraction for the 21st Century
In two-dimensional spectrographs, the optical distortions in the spatial and
dispersion directions produce variations in the sub-pixel sampling of the
background spectrum. Using knowledge of the camera distortions and the
curvature of the spectral features, one can recover information regarding the
background spectrum on wavelength scales much smaller than a pixel. As a
result, one can propagate this better-sampled background spectrum through
inverses of the distortion and rectification transformations, and accurately
model the background spectrum in two-dimensional spectra for which the
distortions have not been removed (i.e. the data have not been
rebinned/rectified). The procedure, as outlined in this paper, is extremely
insensitive to cosmic rays, hot pixels, etc. Because of this insensitivity to
discrepant pixels, sky modeling and subtraction need not be performed as one of
the later steps in a reduction pipeline. Sky-subtraction can now be performed
as one of the earliest tasks, perhaps just after dividing by a flat-field.
Because subtraction of the background can be performed without having to
``clean'' cosmic rays, such bad pixel values can be trivially identified after
removal of the two-dimensional sky background.Comment: 26 pages, 15 figures, accepted for publication in PASP, Figures with
full resolution available at http://www.ociw.edu/~kelso
Conceptual Study of Rotary-Wing Microrobotics
This thesis presents a novel rotary-wing micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) robot design. Two MEMS wing designs were designed, fabricated and tested including one that possesses features conducive to insect level aerodynamics. Two methods for fabricating an angled wing were also attempted with photoresist and CrystalBond™ to create an angle of attack. One particular design consisted of the wing designs mounted on a gear which are driven by MEMS actuators. MEMS comb drive actuators were analyzed, simulated and tested as a feasible drive system. The comb drive resonators were also designed orthogonally which successfully rotated a gear without wings. With wings attached to the gear, orthogonal MEMS thermal actuators demonstrated wing rotation with limited success. Multi-disciplinary theoretical expressions were formulated to account for necessary mechanical force, allowable mass for lift, and electrical power requirements. The robot design did not achieve flight, but the small pieces presented in this research with minor modifications are promising for a potential complete robot design under 1 cm2 wingspan. The complete robot design would work best in a symmetrical quad-rotor configuration for simpler maneuverability and control. The military’s method to gather surveillance, reconnaissance and intelligence could be transformed given a MEMS rotary-wing robot’s diminutive size and multi-role capabilities
Charting the evolution of the ages and metallicities of massive galaxies since z=0.7
The stellar populations of intermediate-redshift galaxies can shed light onto
the growth of massive galaxies in the last 8 billion years. We perform deep,
multi-object rest-frame optical spectroscopy with IMACS/Magellan of ~70
galaxies in the E-CDFS with redshift 0.6522.7 and
stellar mass >10^{10}Msun. Following the Bayesian approach adopted for previous
low-redshift studies, we constrain the stellar mass, mean stellar age and
stellar metallicity of individual galaxies from stellar absorption features. We
characterize for the first time the dependence of stellar metallicity and age
on stellar mass at z~0.7 for all galaxies and for quiescent and star-forming
galaxies separately. These relations for the whole sample have a similar shape
as the z=0.1 SDSS analog, but are shifted by -0.28 dex in age and by -0.13 dex
in metallicity, at odds with simple passive evolution. We find that no
additional star formation and chemical enrichment are required for z=0.7
quiescent galaxies to evolve into the present-day quiescent population.
However, this must be accompanied by the quenching of a fraction of z=0.7
Mstar>10^{11}Msun star-forming galaxies with metallicities comparable to those
of quiescent galaxies, thus increasing the scatter in age without affecting the
metallicity distribution. However rapid quenching of the entire population of
massive star-forming galaxies at z=0.7 would be inconsistent with the
age/metallicity--mass relation for the population as a whole and with the
metallicity distribution of star-forming galaxies only, which are on average
0.12 dex less metal-rich than their local counterparts. This indicates chemical
enrichment until the present in at least a fraction of the z=0.7 massive
star-forming galaxies.[abridged]Comment: accepted for publication on ApJ, 26 pages, 13 figure
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