5,377 research outputs found
Using hybrid GPU/CPU kernel splitting to accelerate spherical convolutions
We present a general method for accelerating by more than an order of
magnitude the convolution of pixelated functions on the sphere with a
radially-symmetric kernel. Our method splits the kernel into a compact
real-space component and a compact spherical harmonic space component. These
components can then be convolved in parallel using an inexpensive commodity GPU
and a CPU. We provide models for the computational cost of both real-space and
Fourier space convolutions and an estimate for the approximation error. Using
these models we can determine the optimum split that minimizes the wall clock
time for the convolution while satisfying the desired error bounds. We apply
this technique to the problem of simulating a cosmic microwave background (CMB)
anisotropy sky map at the resolution typical of the high resolution maps
produced by the Planck mission. For the main Planck CMB science channels we
achieve a speedup of over a factor of ten, assuming an acceptable fractional
rms error of order 1.e-5 in the power spectrum of the output map.Comment: 9 pages, 11 figures, 1 table, accepted by Astronomy & Computing w/
  minor revisions. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with
  arXiv:1211.355
Modeling cosmic void statistics
Understanding the internal structure and spatial distribution of cosmic voids
is crucial when considering them as probes of cosmology. We present recent
advances in modeling void density- and velocity-profiles in real space, as well
as void two-point statistics in redshift space, by examining voids identified
via the watershed transform in state-of-the-art CDM n-body simulations
and mock galaxy catalogs. The simple and universal characteristics that emerge
from these statistics indicate the self-similarity of large-scale structure and
suggest cosmic voids to be among the most pristine objects to consider for
future studies on the nature of dark energy, dark matter and modified gravity.Comment: to appear as proceedings of the IAU Symposium 308 "The Zeldovich
  Universe: Genesis and Growth of the Cosmic Web", 23-28 June 2014, Tallinn,
  Estoni
Universal Density Profile for Cosmic Voids
We present a simple empirical function for the average density profile of
cosmic voids, identified via the watershed technique in CDM N-body
simulations. This function is universal across void size and redshift,
accurately describing a large radial range of scales around void centers with
only two free parameters. In analogy to halo density profiles, these parameters
describe the scale radius and the central density of voids. While we initially
start with a more general four-parameter model, we find two of its parameters
to be redundant, as they follow linear trends with the scale radius in two
distinct regimes of the void sample, separated by its compensation scale.
Assuming linear theory, we derive an analytic formula for the velocity profile
of voids and find an excellent agreement with the numerical data as well. In
our companion paper [Sutter et al., Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc. 442, 462 (2014)]
the presented density profile is shown to be universal even across tracer type,
properly describing voids defined in halo and galaxy distributions of varying
sparsity, allowing us to relate various void populations by simple rescalings.
This provides a powerful framework to match theory and simulations with
observational data, opening up promising perspectives to constrain competing
models of cosmology and gravity.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. Matches PRL published version after minor
  correction
On the observability of coupled dark energy with cosmic voids
Taking N-body simulations with volumes and particle densities tuned to match
the SDSS DR7 spectroscopic main sample, we assess the ability of current void
catalogs (e.g., Sutter et al. 2012b) to distinguish a model of coupled dark
matter-dark energy from {\Lambda}CDM cosmology using properties of cosmic
voids. Identifying voids with the VIDE toolkit, we find no statistically
significant differences in the ellipticities, but find that coupling produces a
population of significantly larger voids, possibly explaining the recent result
of Tavasoli et al. (2013). In addition, we use the universal density profile of
Hamaus et al. (2014) to quantify the relationship between coupling and density
profile shape, finding that the coupling produces broader, shallower,
undercompensated profiles for large voids by thinning the walls between
adjacent medium-scale voids. We find that these differences are potentially
measurable with existing void catalogs once effects from survey geometries and
peculiar velocities are taken into account.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, moderate revision and extended discussion from
  referee comments, MNRAS letters accepte
A response to arXiv:1310.2791: A self-consistent public catalogue of voids and superclusters in the SDSS Data Release 7 galaxy surveys
Recently, Nadathur & Hotchkiss (2013) submitted a paper discussing a new
cosmic void catalog. This paper includes claims about the void catalog
described in Sutter et al. (2012). In this note, we respond to those claims,
clarify some discrepancies between the text of Sutter et al. (2012) and the
most recent version of the catalog, and provide some comments on the
differences between our catalog and that of Nadathur & Hotchkiss (2013). All
updates and documentation for our catalog are available at
http://www.cosmicvoids.net.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figure, public catalog available at
  http://www.cosmicvoids.ne
First measurement of gravitational lensing by cosmic voids in SDSS
We report the first measurement of the diminutive lensing signal arising from
matter underdensities associated with cosmic voids. While undetectable
individually, by stacking the weak gravitational shear estimates around 901
voids detected in SDSS DR7 by Sutter et al. (2012a), we find substantial
evidence for a depression of the lensing signal compared to the cosmic mean.
This depression is most pronounced at the void radius, in agreement with
analytical models of void matter profiles. Even with the largest void sample
and imaging survey available today, we cannot put useful constraints on the
radial dark-matter void profile. We invite independent investigations of our
findings by releasing data and analysis code to the public at
https://github.com/pmelchior/void-lensingComment: 6 pages, 5 figures, as accepted by MNRA
Evidence for Adsorption of Chlorine Species on Iron(III) (hydr)oxides in the Sheepbed Mudstone, Gale Crater, Mars
Chlorine is a widespread element on Mars present in dust, soils and rocks, including the Sheepbed mudstone at Yellowknife Bay, Gale crater. Combined elemental and volatile analyses of two drilled samples, Cumberland and John Klein, indicated that chloride (Cl-) and perchlorate (ClO4 -) are likely present in the mudstone. The nature of chlorine species in Sheepbed mudstone is still not well constrained. It has been proposed that both are present as amorphous or crystalline salts physically mixed with mudstone minerals. We alternatively hypothesize that adsorbed perchlorate and chloride exist in the mudstone and adsorption could occur, in particular, on Fe(III) (hydr)oxide phases as supported by laboratory observations on terrestrial materials. Mineralogical and compositional analyses of the drilled Cumberland mudstone sample revealed the presence of ~30 wt% of a Fe-rich X-ray amorphous phase. Ferrihydrite has been proposed as a component of the Fe-rich X-ray amorphous material. The objectives of this work were to determine adsorption of perchlorate and chloride on ferrihydrite and to enable data comparison by characterizing adsorbed chloride and perchlorate with thermal and evolved gas analysis run under operating conditions similar to the SAM instrument onboard the Curiosity rover
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