44,471 research outputs found
NICMOS and VLBA observations of the gravitational lens system B1933+503
NICMOS observations of the complex gravitational lens system B1933+503 reveal
infrared counterparts to two of the inverted spectrum radio images. The
infrared images have arc-like structures. The corresponding radio images are
also detected in a VLBA map made at 1.7 GHz with a resolution of 6 mas. We fail
to detect two of the four inverted radio spectrum components with the VLBA even
though they are clearly visible in a MERLIN map at the same frequency at a
different epoch. The absence of these two components could be due to rapid
variability on a time-scale less than the time delay, or to broadening of the
images during propagation of the radio waves through the ISM of the lensing
galaxy to an extent that they fall below the surface brightness detectability
threshold of the VLBA observations. The failure to detect the same two images
with NICMOS is probably due to extinction in the ISM of the lensing galaxy.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, submitted to MNRA
Support Vector Machine classification of strong gravitational lenses
The imminent advent of very large-scale optical sky surveys, such as Euclid
and LSST, makes it important to find efficient ways of discovering rare objects
such as strong gravitational lens systems, where a background object is
multiply gravitationally imaged by a foreground mass. As well as finding the
lens systems, it is important to reject false positives due to intrinsic
structure in galaxies, and much work is in progress with machine learning
algorithms such as neural networks in order to achieve both these aims. We
present and discuss a Support Vector Machine (SVM) algorithm which makes use of
a Gabor filterbank in order to provide learning criteria for separation of
lenses and non-lenses, and demonstrate using blind challenges that under
certain circumstances it is a particularly efficient algorithm for rejecting
false positives. We compare the SVM engine with a large-scale human examination
of 100000 simulated lenses in a challenge dataset, and also apply the SVM
method to survey images from the Kilo-Degree Survey.Comment: Accepted by MNRA
Interactions of Cosmic Superstrings
We develop methods by which cosmic superstring interactions can be studied in
detail. These include the reconnection probability and emission of radiation
such as gravitons or small string loops. Loop corrections to these are
discussed, as well as relationships to -strings. These tools should
allow a phenomenological study of string models in anticipation of upcoming
experiments sensitive to cosmic string radiation.Comment: 22 pages, 6 figures; v2: updated reference
Adjusting the tasseled cap brightness and greenness factors for atmospheric path radiance and absorption on a pixel by pixel basis
A radiative transfer model was used to convert ground measured reflectances into the radiance at the top of the atmosphere, for several levels of atmospheric path radiance. The radiance in MSS7 (0.8 to 1.1 m) was multiplied by the transmission fraction for atmospheres having different levels of precipitable water. The radiance values were converted to simulated LANDSAT digital counts for four path radiance levels and four levels of precipitable water. These values were used to calculate the Kauth-Thomas brightness, greenness, yellowness, and nonsuch factors. Brightness was affected by surface conditions and path radiance. Greenness was affected by surface conditions, path radiance, and precipitable water. Yellowness was affected by path radiance and nonsuch by precipitable water, and both factors changed only slightly with surface conditions. Yellowness and nonsuch were used to adjust brightness and greenness to produce factors that were affected only by surface conditions such as soils and vegetation, and not by path radiance and precipitable water
A Descriptive Study of the Population Dynamics of Adult \u3ci\u3eDiabrotica Virgifera Virgifera\u3c/i\u3e (Coleoptera: Chrysomelidae) in Artificially Infested Corn Fields
The influence of corn plant phenology on the dynamics of adult western corn rootworm, Diabrotica virgifera virgifera, populations was studied during 1988 and 1989 in com fields artificially infested with eggs. Fifty percent of adult emergence from the soil occurred by day 194 in 1988 and day 203 in 1989. In both years, adult emergence was synchronized with corn flowering, eggs were recovered in soil samples approximately four days after reproductive females were first observed in the population, and oviposition was essentially complete about 25 days after it began. The number of reproductive female beetle-days accumulating per m2 was similar in both years. Approximately two times as many eggs were laid in 1988 (1239 eggs 1m2) as in 1989 (590 eggs 1m2). The difference in egg density may have been caused by differences among years in the temporal synchrony of reproductive beetles with flowering corn. Daily survival rates of adults were high while corn was flowering; exhibited a gradual decline during grain filling; and decreased rapidly during the grain drying stage
A comparison between conventional and LANDSAT based hydrologic modeling: The Four Mile Run case study
Models designed to support the hydrologic studies associated with urban water resources planning require input parameters that are defined in terms of land cover. Estimating the land cover is a difficult and expensive task when drainage areas larger than a few sq. km are involved. Conventional and LANDSAT based methods for estimating the land cover based input parameters required by hydrologic planning models were compared in a case study of the 50.5 sq. km (19.5 sq. mi) Four Mile Run Watershed in Virginia. Results of the study indicate that the LANDSAT based approach is highly cost effective for planning model studies. The conventional approach to define inputs was based on 1:3600 aerial photos, required 110 man-days and a total cost of 2,350. The conventional and LANDSAT based models gave similar results relative to discharges and estimated annual damages expected from no flood control, channelization, and detention storage alternatives
A survey of polarization in the JVAS/CLASS flat-spectrum radio source surveys: I. The data and catalogue production
We have used the very large JVAS/CLASS 8.4-GHz surveys of flat-spectrum radio
sources to obtain a large, uniformly observed and calibrated, sample of radio
source polarizations. These are useful for many investigations of the
properties of radio sources and the interstellar medium. We discuss comparisons
with polarization measurements from this survey and from other large-scale
surveys of polarization in flat-spectrum sources.Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 8 pages, 5 figures. Full version of Table 2
available at http://www.jb.man.ac.uk/~njj/classqu_po
Redshifts of CLASS Radio Sources
Spectroscopic observations of a sample of 42 flat-spectrum radio sources from
the Cosmic Lens All-Sky Survey (CLASS) have yielded a mean redshift of with an RMS spread of 0.95, at a completeness level of 64%. The sample
consists of sources with a 5-GHz flux density of 25-50 mJy, making it the
faintest flat-spectrum radio sample for which the redshift distribution has
been studied. The spectra, obtained with the Willam Herschel Telescope (WHT),
consist mainly of broad-line quasars at and narrow-line galaxies at
. Though the mean redshift of flat-spectrum radio sources exhibits
little variation over more than two orders of magnitude in radio flux density,
there is evidence for a decreasing fraction of quasars at weaker flux levels.
In this paper we present the results of our spectroscopic observations, and
discuss the implications for constraining cosmological parameters with
statistical analyses of the CLASS survey.Comment: 10 pages, AJ accepte
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