277 research outputs found
Ly-alpha forest: efficient unbiased estimation of second-order properties with missing data
Context. One important step in the statistical analysis of the Ly-alpha
forest data is the study of their second order properties. Usually, this is
accomplished by means of the two-point correlation function or, alternatively,
the K-function. In the computation of these functions it is necessary to take
into account the presence of strong metal line complexes and strong Ly-alpha
lines that can hidden part of the Ly-alpha forest and represent a non
negligible source of bias. Aims. In this work, we show quantitatively what are
the effects of the gaps introduced in the spectrum by the strong lines if they
are not properly accounted for in the computation of the correlation
properties. We propose a geometric method which is able to solve this problem
and is computationally more efficient than the Monte Carlo (MC) technique that
is typically adopted in Cosmology studies. The method is implemented in two
different algorithms. The first one permits to obtain exact results, whereas
the second one provides approximated results but is computationally very
efficient. The proposed approach can be easily extended to deal with the case
of two or more lists of lines that have to be analyzed at the same time.
Methods. Numerical experiments are presented that illustrate the consequences
to neglect the effects due to the strong lines and the excellent performances
of the proposed approach. Results. The proposed method is able to remarkably
improve the estimates of both the two-point correlation function and the
K-function.Comment: A&A accepted, 12 pages, 15 figure
Filter design for the detection of compact sources based on the Neyman-Pearson detector
This paper considers the problem of compact source detection on a Gaussian
background in 1D. Two aspects of this problem are considered: the design of the
detector and the filtering of the data. Our detection scheme is based on local
maxima and it takes into account not only the amplitude but also the curvature
of the maxima. A Neyman-Pearson test is used to define the region of
acceptance, that is given by a sufficient linear detector that is independent
on the amplitude distribution of the sources. We study how detection can be
enhanced by means of linear filters with a scaling parameter and compare some
of them (the Mexican Hat wavelet, the matched and the scale-adaptive filters).
We introduce a new filter, that depends on two free parameters (biparametric
scale-adaptive filter). The value of these two parameters can be determined,
given the a priori pdf of the amplitudes of the sources, such that the filter
optimizes the performance of the detector in the sense that it gives the
maximum number of real detections once fixed the number density of spurious
sources. The combination of a detection scheme that includes information on the
curvature and a flexible filter that incorporates two free parameters (one of
them a scaling) improves significantly the number of detections in some
interesting cases. In particular, for the case of weak sources embedded in
white noise the improvement with respect to the standard matched filter is of
the order of 40%. Finally, an estimation of the amplitude of the source is
introduced and it is proven that such an estimator is unbiased and it has
maximum efficiency. We perform numerical simulations to test these theoretical
ideas and conclude that the results of the simulations agree with the
analytical ones.Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures, version accepted for publication in MNRAS.
Corrected typos in Tab.
The Dependence of Galaxy Shape on Luminosity and Surface Brightness Profile
For a sample of 96,951 galaxies from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data
Release 3, we study the distribution of apparent axis ratios as a function of
r-band absolute magnitude and surface brightness profile type. We use the
parameter fracDeV to quantify the profile type (fracDeV = 1 for a de
Vaucouleurs profile; fracDeV = 0 for an exponential profile). When the apparent
axis ratio q_{am} is estimated from the moments of the light distribution, the
roundest galaxies are very bright (M_r \sim -23) de Vaucouleurs galaxies and
the flattest are modestly bright (M_r \sim -18) exponential galaxies. When the
apparent axis ratio q_{25} is estimated from the axis ratio of the 25
mag/arcsec^2 isophote, we find that de Vaucouleurs galaxies are flatter than
exponential galaxies of the same absolute magnitude. For a given surface
brightness profile type, very bright galaxies are rounder, on average, than
fainter galaxies. We deconvolve the distributions of apparent axis ratios to
find the distribution of the intrinsic short-to-long axis ratio gamma, assuming
constant triaxiality T. For all profile types and luminosities, the
distribution of apparent axis ratios is inconsistent with a population of
oblate spheroids, but is usually consistent with a population of prolate
spheroids. Bright galaxies with a de Vaucouleurs profile (M_r < -21.84, fracDeV
> 0.9) have a distribution of q_{am} that is consistent with triaxiality in the
range 0.4 < T < 0.8, with mean intrinsic axis ratio 0.66 < gamma < 0.69. The
fainter de Vaucouleurs galaxies are best fit with prolate spheroids (T = 1)
with mean axis ratio gamma = 0.51.Comment: 32 pages, 12 figures, to appear in Ap
Numerical Simulation of Non-Gaussian Random Fields with Prescribed Marginal Distributions and Cross-Correlation Structure II: Multivariate Random Fields
We provide theoretical procedures and practical recipes to simulate
non-Gaussian correlated, homogeneous random fields with prescribed marginal
distributions and cross-correlation structure, either in a N-dimensional
Cartesian space or on the celestial sphere. We illustrate our methods using
far-infrared maps obtained with the Infrared Space Observatory. However, the
methodology presented here can be used in other astrophysical applications that
require modeling correlated features in sky maps, for example, the simulation
of multifrequency sky maps where backgrounds, sources and noise are correlated
and can be modeled by random fields.Comment: 24 pages, 4 figures. To appear in PAS
Measuring the Three-Dimensional Structure of Galaxy Clusters. II. Are clusters of galaxies oblate or prolate?
The intrinsic shape of galaxy clusters can be obtained through a combination
of X-ray and Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect observations once cosmological parameters
are assumed to be known. In this paper we discuss the feasibility of modelling
galaxy clusters as either prolate or oblate ellipsoids. We analyze the
intra-cluster medium distribution for a sample of 25 X-ray selected clusters,
with measured Sunyaev-Zeldovich temperature decrements. A mixed population of
prolate and oblate ellipsoids of revolution fits the data well, with prolate
shapes preferred on a 60-76% basis. We observe an excess of clusters nearly
aligned along the line of sight, with respect to what is expected from a
randomly oriented cluster population, which might imply the presence of a
selection bias in our sample. We also find signs that a more general triaxial
morphology might better describe the morphology of galaxy clusters. Additional
constraints from gravitational lensing could disentangle the degeneracy between
an ellipsoidal and a triaxial morphology, and could also allow an unbiased
determination of the Hubble constant.Comment: 9 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophys.
Quantum Search with Two-atom Collisions in Cavity QED
We propose a scheme to implement two-qubit Grover's quantum search algorithm
using Cavity Quantum Electrodynamics. Circular Rydberg atoms are used as
quantum bits (qubits). They interact with the electromagnetic field of a
non-resonant cavity . The quantum gate dynamics is provided by a
cavity-assisted collision, robust against decoherence processes. We present the
detailed procedure and analyze the experimental feasibility.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figure
Statistical nature of non-Gaussianity from cubic order primordial perturbations: CMB map simulations and genus statistic
We simulate CMB maps including non-Gaussianity arising from cubic order
perturbations of the primordial gravitational potential, characterized by the
non-linearity parameter . The maps are used to study the characteristic
nature of the resulting non-Gaussian temperature fluctuations. We measure the
genus and investigate how it deviates from Gaussian shape as a function of
and smoothing scale. We find that the deviation of the non-Gaussian
genus curve from the Gaussian one has an antisymmetric, sine function like
shape, implying more hot and more cold spots for and less of both
for . The deviation increases linearly with and also
exhibits mild increase as the smoothing scale increases. We further study other
statistics derived from the genus, namely, the number of hot spots, the number
of cold spots, combined number of hot and cold spots and the slope of the genus
curve at mean temperature fluctuation. We find that these observables carry
signatures of that are clearly distinct from the quadratic order
perturbations, encoded in the parameter . Hence they can be very useful
tools for distinguishing not only between non-Gaussian temperature fluctuations
and Gaussian ones but also between and type
non-Gaussianities.Comment: 18+1 page
The Apparent and Intrinsic Shape of the APM Galaxy Clusters
We estimate the distribution of intrinsic shapes of APM galaxy clusters from
the distribution of their apparent shapes. We measure the projected cluster
ellipticities using two alternative methods. The first method is based on
moments of the discrete galaxy distribution while the second is based on
moments of the smoothed galaxy distribution. We study the performance of both
methods using Monte Carlo cluster simulations covering the range of APM cluster
distances and including a random distribution of background galaxies. We find
that the first method suffers from severe systematic biases, whereas the second
is more reliable. After excluding clusters dominated by substructure and
quantifying the systematic biases in our estimated shape parameters, we recover
a corrected distribution of projected ellipticities. We use the non-parametric
kernel method to estimate the smooth apparent ellipticity distribution, and
numerically invert a set of integral equations to recover the corresponding
distribution of intrinsic ellipticities under the assumption that the clusters
are either oblate or prolate spheroids. The prolate spheroidal model fits the
APM cluster data best.Comment: 8 pages, including 7 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Porcine Lawsonia intracellularis Ileitis in Italy and Its Association with Porcine Circovirus Type 2 (PCV2) Infection
The objective of this study was to employ a diagnostic algorithm, which involves detecting positive farms by stool PCR followed by PCR and histology/immunohistochemistry on ileum samples, for diagnosing Lawsonia intracellularis proliferative enteritis in Northern Italy. The primary aim was to examine the relationship between the gold standard of L. intracellularis diagnostics, namely histology and immunohistochemistry, and PCR in acute and chronic cases of L. intracellularis enteritides. An additional goal was to investigate the coinfection of L. intracellularis with porcine circovirus type 2 (PCV2). Twenty-eight ileum samples, including four from acute cases and 24 from chronic cases, were collected. PCR yielded positive results in 19 cases (four acute and 15 chronic cases). In comparison, immunohistochemistry was positive in 16 cases (four acute and 12 chronic cases), with an observed agreement of 89%. The findings suggest that performing the two tests in series can increase the specificity of the causal diagnosis. PCR may be used as a screening tool to identify the presence of the microorganism, and only positive cases will be examined by histology and immunohistochemistry to confirm the causative role of L. intracellularis. Co-infection with PCV2 was demonstrate in two out of four acute cases and in two out of 24 chronic cases, providing further evidence to support the hypothesis that when the infection starts with ubiquitous pathogens such as L. intracellularis, it may boost the possibility of PCV2 replication, especially in acute cases. As a result, this may trigger a transition from subclinical to clinical forms of PCV2 disease
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