250 research outputs found
Fungal infections of grapevine roots in phylloxera-infested vineyards
Wounds caused by feeding of grape phylloxera on grape roots can become infected with a variety of fungi. Fusarium roseum, F. oxysporum and Pythium ultimum are important in Vitis vinifera Chardonnay wounds whereas F. oxysporum and Cephalosporium sp. are important for the moderately tolerant rootstock AXR#1. Proportion of root lengths infected in the phloem parenchyma were measured in two vineyards through the 1996 growing season and into the winter. Infection rates were highest in spring (as measured in May) but decreased to a low level by the end of summer. There was a second infection peak in fall. We suggest that the decline in fungal infections was due to death of highly infected roots and their removal from the sampled pool of roots. Loss of roots is a logical cause of vine decline and explains why there have been poor correlations between phylloxera populations and vine damage symptoms
Time Domain Explorations With Digital Sky Surveys
One of the new frontiers of astronomical research is the exploration of time
variability on the sky at different wavelengths and flux levels. We have
carried out a pilot project using DPOSS data to study strong variables and
transients, and are now extending it to the new Palomar-QUEST synoptic sky
survey. We report on our early findings and outline the methodology to be
implemented in preparation for a real-time transient detection pipeline. In
addition to large numbers of known types of highly variable sources (e.g., SNe,
CVs, OVV QSOs, etc.), we expect to find numerous transients whose nature may be
established by a rapid follow-up. Whereas we will make all detected variables
publicly available through the web, we anticipate that email alerts would be
issued in the real time for a subset of events deemed to be the most
interesting. This real-time process entails many challenges, in an effort to
maintain a high completeness while keeping the contamination low. We will
utilize distributed Grid services developed by the GRIST project, and implement
a variety of advanced statistical and machine learning techniques.Comment: 5 pages, 2 postscript figures, uses adassconf.sty. To be published
in: "ADASS XIV (2004)", Eds. Patrick Shopbell, Matthew Britton and Rick
Ebert, ASP Conference Serie
Cosmic Voids: structure, dynamics and galaxies
In this review we discuss several aspects of Cosmic Voids. Voids are a major
component of the large scale distribution of matter and galaxies in the
Universe. They are of instrumental importance for understanding the emergence
of the Cosmic Web. Their relatively simple shape and structure makes them into
useful tools for extracting the value of a variety cosmic parameters, possibly
including even that of the influence of dark energy. Perhaps most promising and
challenging is the issue of the galaxies found within their realm. Not only
does the pristine environment of voids provide a promising testing ground for
assessing the role of environment on the formation and evolution of galaxies,
the dearth of dwarf galaxies may even represent a serious challenge to the
standard view of cosmic structure formation.Comment: 29 pages, 12 figures, invited review COSPA2008, Pohang, Korea. Modern
Physics Letters A, accepted. For high-res version see
http://www.astro.rug.nl/~weygaert/voids.cospa2008.weygaert.pd
The integrated Sachs-Wolfe imprints of cosmic superstructures: a problem for \Lambda CDM
A crucial diagnostic of the \Lambda CDM cosmological model is the integrated
Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect of large-scale structure on the cosmic microwave
background (CMB). The ISW imprint of superstructures of size \sim100\;h^{-1}
Mpc at redshift has been detected with significance,
however it has been noted that the signal is much larger than expected. We
revisit the calculation using linear theory predictions in \Lambda CDM
cosmology for the number density of superstructures and their radial density
profile, and take possible selection effects into account. While our expected
signal is larger than previous estimates, it is still inconsistent by
with the observation. If the observed signal is indeed due to the
ISW effect then huge, extremely underdense voids are far more common in the
observed universe than predicted by \Lambda CDM.Comment: 3 figures. v3: minor additions for clearer explanations, conclusions
unchanged. Version to be published in JCA
A Theory of a Spot
We present a simple inflationary scenario that can produce arbitrarily large
spherical underdense or overdense regions embedded in a standard Lambda cold
dark matter paradigm, which we refer to as bubbles. We analyze the effect such
bubbles would have on the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). For super-horizon
sized bubble in the vicinity of the last scattering surface, a signal is
imprinted onto CMB via a combination of Sach-Wolfe and an early integrated
Sach-Wolfe (ISW) effects. Smaller, sub-horizon sized bubbles at lower redshifts
(during matter domination and later) can imprint secondary anisotropies on the
CMB via Rees-Sciama, late-time ISW and Ostriker-Vishniac effects. Our scenario,
and arguably most similar inflationary models, produce bubbles which are
over/underdense in potential: in density such bubbles are characterized by
having a distinct wall with the interior staying at the cosmic mean density. We
show that such models can potentially, with only moderate fine tuning, explain
the \emph{cold spot}, a non-Gaussian feature identified in the Wilkinson
Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) data by several authors. However, more
detailed comparisons with current and future CMB data are necessary to confirm
(or rule out) this scenario.Comment: 19 pages, 19 figures, added references and explanations, JCAP in
pres
Towards More Precise Survey Photometry for PanSTARRS and LSST: Measuring Directly the Optical Transmission Spectrum of the Atmosphere
Motivated by the recognition that variation in the optical transmission of
the atmosphere is probably the main limitation to the precision of ground-based
CCD measurements of celestial fluxes, we review the physical processes that
attenuate the passage of light through the Earth's atmosphere. The next
generation of astronomical surveys, such as PanSTARRS and LSST, will greatly
benefit from dedicated apparatus to obtain atmospheric transmission data that
can be associated with each survey image. We review and compare various
approaches to this measurement problem, including photometry, spectroscopy, and
LIDAR. In conjunction with careful measurements of instrumental throughput,
atmospheric transmission measurements should allow next-generation imaging
surveys to produce photometry of unprecedented precision. Our primary concerns
are the real-time determination of aerosol scattering and absorption by water
along the line of sight, both of which can vary over the course of a night's
observations.Comment: 41 pages, 14 figures. Accepted PAS
CMB polarization as a probe of the anomalous nature of the Cold Spot
One of the most interesting explanations for the non-Gaussian Cold Spot (CS)
detected in the WMAP data by Vielva et al. 2004, is that it arises from the
interaction of the CMB radiation with a cosmic texture (Cruz et al. 2007b). In
this case, a lack of polarization is expected in the region of the spot, as
compared to the typical values associated to large fluctuations of a GIRF. In
addition, other physical processes related to a non-linear evolution of the
gravitational field could lead to a similar scenario. However, some of these
alternative scenarios (e.g., a large void in the large scale structure) have
been shown to be very unlikely. In this work we characterise the polarization
properties of the Cold Spot under both hypotheses: a large Gaussian spot and an
anomalous feature generated, for instance, by a cosmic texture. We propose a
methodology to distinguish between them, and we discuss its discrimination
power as a function of the instrumental noise level. In particular, we address
the cases of current experiments, like WMAP and Planck, and others in
development as QUIJOTE. We find that for an ideal experiment the Gaussian
hypothesis could be rejected at a significance level better than 0.8%. While
WMAP is far from providing useful information in this respect, we find that
Planck will be able to reach a significance of around 7%; in addition, we show
that the ground-based experiment QUIJOTE could provide a significance of around
1%. If these results are combined with the significance level found for the CS
in temperature, the capability of QUIJOTE and Planck to reject the alternative
hypothesis becomes 0.025% and 0.124%, respectively.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted in MNRAS. Minor changes made to match
the final versio
The VIMOS Public Extragalactic Redshift Survey (VIPERS). Never mind the gaps: comparing techniques to restore homogeneous sky coverage
[Abridged] Non-uniform sampling and gaps in sky coverage are common in galaxy
redshift surveys, but these effects can degrade galaxy counts-in-cells and
density estimates. We carry out a comparison of methods that aim to fill the
gaps to correct for the systematic effects. Our study is motivated by the
analysis of the VIMOS Extragalactic Redshift Survey (VIPERS), a flux-limited
survey (i<22.5) based on one-pass observations with VIMOS, with gaps covering
25% of the surveyed area and a mean sampling rate of 35%. Our findings are
applicable to other surveys with similar observing strategies. We compare 1)
two algorithms based on photometric redshift, that assign redshifts to galaxies
based on the spectroscopic redshifts of the nearest neighbours, 2) two Bayesian
methods, the Wiener filter and the Poisson-Lognormal filter. Using galaxy mock
catalogues we quantify the accuracy of the counts-in-cells measurements on
scales of R=5 and 8 Mpc/h after applying each of these methods. We also study
how they perform to account for spectroscopic redshift error and inhomogeneous
and sparse sampling rate. We find that in VIPERS the errors in counts-in-cells
measurements on R<10 Mpc/h scales are dominated by the sparseness of the
sample. All methods underpredict by 20-35% the counts at high densities. This
systematic bias is of the same order as random errors. No method outperforms
the others. Random and systematic errors decrease for larger cells. We show
that it is possible to separate the lowest and highest densities on scales of 5
Mpc/h at redshifts 0.5<z<1.1, over a large volume such as in VIPERS survey.
This is vital for the characterisation of cosmic variance and rare populations
(e.g, brightest galaxies) in environmental studies at these redshifts.Comment: 17 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in A&A (revised
version after minor revision and language editing
Detection of a supervoid aligned with the cold spot of the cosmic microwave background
We use the WISE-2MASS infrared galaxy catalogue matched with Pan-STARRS1 (PS1) galaxies to search for a supervoid in the direction of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) cold spot (CS). Our imaging catalogue has median redshift z ≃ 0.14, and we obtain photometric redshifts from PS1 optical colours to create a tomographic map of the galaxy distribution. The radial profile centred on the CS shows a large low-density region, extending over tens of degrees. Motivated by previous CMB results, we test for underdensities within two angular radii, 5°, and 15°. The counts in photometric redshift bins show significantly low densities at high detection significance, ≳5σ and ≳6σ, respectively, for the two fiducial radii. The line-of-sight position of the deepest region of the void is z ≃ 0.15–0.25. Our data, combined with an earlier measurement by Granett, Szapudi & Neyrinck, are consistent with a large Rvoid = (220 ± 50) h−1 Mpc supervoid with δm ≃ −0.14 ± 0.04 centred at z = 0.22 ± 0.03. Such a supervoid, constituting at least a ≃3.3σ fluctuation in a Gaussian distribution of the Λ cold dark matter model, is a plausible cause for the CS
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