424 research outputs found
Mobile technology-enhanced asset maintenance in an SME
This article is ©Emerald Group Publishing and permission has been granted for this version to appear on http;//chesterrep.openrepository.com. Emerald does not grant permission for this article to be further copied/distributed or hosted elsewhere without the express permission from Emerald Group Publishing Limited.This article discusses the development of a prototype system to demonstrate the potential benefits of deploying mobile technology to enhance asset maintenance processes in a small food manufacturing plant
Analysis of a Hubble Space Telescope Search for Red Dwarfs: Limits on Baryonic Matter in the Galactic Halo
We re-examine a deep {\it Hubble Space Telescope} pencil-beam search for red
dwarfs, stars just massive enough to burn Hydrogen. The authors of this search
(Bahcall, Flynn, Gould \& Kirhakos 1994) found that red dwarfs make up less
than 6\% of the galactic halo. First, we extrapolate this result to include
brown dwarfs, stars not quite massive enough to burn hydrogen; we assume a
mass function. Then the total mass of red dwarfs and brown dwarfs
is 18\% of the halo. This result is consistent with microlensing results
assuming a popular halo model. However, using new stellar models and parallax
observations of low mass, low metallicity stars, we obtain much tighter bounds
on low mass stars. We find the halo red dwarf density to be of the halo,
while our best estimate of this value is 0.14-0.37\%. Thus our estimate of the
halo mass density of red dwarfs drops to 16-40 times less than the reported
result of Bahcall et al (1994). For a mass function, this suggests
a total density of red dwarfs and brown dwarfs of 0.25-0.67\% of the
halo, \ie , (0.9-2.5)\times 10^9\msun out to 50 kpc. Such a low result would
conflict with microlensing estimates by the \macho\ group (Alcock \etal
1995a,b).Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures. Figure one only available via fax or snail-mail
To be published in ApJL. fig. 2 now available in postscript. Some minor
changes in dealing with disk forground. Some cosmetic changes. Updated
reference
Exoplanetary atmosphere target selection in the era of comparative planetology
The large number of new planets expected from wide-area transit surveys means
that follow-up transmission spectroscopy studies of their atmospheres will be
limited by the availability of telescope assets. We argue that telescopes
covering a broad range of apertures will be required, with even 1m-class
instruments providing a potentially important contribution. Survey strategies
that employ automated target selection will enable robust population studies.
As part of such a strategy, we propose a decision metric to pair the best
target to the most suitable telescope, and demonstrate its effectiveness even
when only primary transit observables are available. Transmission spectroscopy
target selection need not therefore be impeded by the bottle-neck of requiring
prior follow-up observations to determine the planet mass. The decision metric
can be easily deployed within a distributed heterogeneous network of telescopes
equipped to undertake either broadband photometry or spectroscopy. We show how
the metric can be used either to optimise the observing strategy for a given
telescope (e.g. choice of filter) or to enable the selection of the best
telescope to optimise the overall sample size. Our decision metric can also
provide the basis for a selection function to help evaluate the statistical
completeness of follow-up transmission spectroscopy datasets. Finally, we
validate our metric by comparing its ranked set of targets against lists of
planets that have had their atmospheres successfully probed, and against some
existing prioritised exoplanet lists.Comment: 20 pages, 16 figures, 3 tables. Revision 3, accepted by MNRAS.
Improvements include always using planetary masses where available and
reliable, treatment for sky backgrounds and out-of-transit noise and a use
case for defocused photometr
The POINT-AGAPE Survey: Comparing Automated Searches of Microlensing Events toward M31
Searching for microlensing in M31 using automated superpixel surveys raises a
number of difficulties which are not present in more conventional techniques.
Here we focus on the problem that the list of microlensing candidates is
sensitive to the selection criteria or "cuts" imposed and some subjectivity is
involved in this. Weakening the cuts will generate a longer list of
microlensing candidates but with a greater fraction of spurious ones;
strengthening the cuts will produce a shorter list but may exclude some genuine
events. We illustrate this by comparing three analyses of the same data-set
obtained from a 3-year observing run on the INT in La Palma. The results of two
of these analyses have been already reported: Belokurov et al. (2005) obtained
between 3 and 22 candidates, depending on the strength of their cuts, while
Calchi Novati et al. (2005) obtained 6 candidates. The third analysis is
presented here for the first time and reports 10 microlensing candidates, 7 of
which are new. Only two of the candidates are common to all three analyses. In
order to understand why these analyses produce different candidate lists, a
comparison is made of the cuts used by the three groups...Comment: 28 pages, 24 figures, 9 table
Is the Large Magellanic Cloud a Large Microlensing Cloud?
An expression is provided for the self-lensing optical depth of the thin LMC
disk surrounded by a shroud of stars at larger scale heights. The formula is
written in terms of the vertical velocity dispersion of the thin disk
population. If tidal forcing causes 1-5 % of the disk mass to have a height
larger than 6 kpc and 10-15 % to have a height above 3 kpc, then the
self-lensing optical depth of the LMC is , which is
within the observational uncertainties. The shroud may be composed of bright
stars provided they are not in stellar hydrodynamical equilibrium.
Alternatively, the shroud may be built from low mass stars or compact objects,
though then the self-lensing optical depths are overestimates of the true
optical depth by a factor of roughly 3. The distributions of timescales of the
events and their spatial variation across the face of the LMC disk offer
possibilities of identifying the dominant lens population. In propitious
circumstances, an experiment lifetime of less than 5 years is sufficient to
decide between the competing claims of Milky Way halos and LMC lenses. However,
LMC disks can sometimes mimic the microlensing properties of Galactic halos for
many years and then decades of survey work are needed. In this case
observations of parallax or binary caustic events offer the best hope for
current experiments to deduce the lens population. The difficult models to
distinguish are Milky Way halos in which the lens fraction is low (< 10 %) and
fattened LMC disks composed of lenses with a typical mass of low luminosity
stars or greater. A next-generation wide-area microlensing survey, such as the
proposed ``SuperMACHO'' experiment, will be able to distinguish even these
difficult models with just a year or two of data.Comment: 25 pages, 4 figures, The Astrophysical Journal (in press
The POINT-AGAPE survey II: An Unrestricted Search for Microlensing Events towards M31
An automated search is carried out for microlensing events using a catalogue
of 44554 variable superpixel lightcurves derived from our three-year monitoring
program of M31. Each step of our candidate selection is objective and
reproducible by a computer. Our search is unrestricted, in the sense that it
has no explicit timescale cut. So, it must overcome the awkward problem of
distinguishing long-timescale microlensing events from long-period stellar
variables. The basis of the selection algorithm is the fitting of the
superpixel lightcurves to two different theoretical models, using variable star
and blended microlensing templates. Only if microlensing is preferred is an
event retained as a possible candidate. Further cuts are made with regard to
(i) sampling, (ii) goodness of fit of the peak to a Paczynski curve, (iii)
consistency of the microlensing hypothesis with the absence of a resolved
source, (iv) achromaticity, (v) position in the colour-magnitude diagram and
(vi) signal-to-noise ratio. Our results are reported in terms of first-level
candidates, which are the most trustworthy, and second-level candidates, which
are possible microlensing but have lower signal-to-noise and are more
questionable. The pipeline leaves just 3 first-level candidates, all of which
have very short full-width half-maximum timescale (<5 days) and 3 second-level
candidates, which have timescales of 31, 36 and 51 days respectively. We also
show 16 third-level lightcurves, as an illustration of the events that just
fail the threshold for designation as microlensing candidates. They are almost
certainly mainly variable stars. Two of the 3 first-level candidates correspond
to known events (PA 00-S3 and PA 00-S4) already reported by the POINT-AGAPE
project. The remaining first-level candidate is new.Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, MNRAS, to appea
The Origin of Primordial Dwarf Stars and Baryonic Dark Matter
I present a scenario for the production of low mass, degenerate dwarfs of
mass via the mechanism of Lenzuni, Chernoff & Salpeter (1992).
Such objects meet the mass limit requirements for halo dark matter from
microlensing surveys while circumventing the chemical evolution constraints on
normal white dwarf stars. I describe methods to observationally constrain this
scenario and suggest that such objects may originate in small clusters formed
from the thermal instability of shocked, heated gas in dark matter haloes, such
as suggested by Fall & Rees (1985) for globular clusters.Comment: TeX, 4 pages plus 2 postscript figures. To appear in Astrophysical
Journal Letter
Theory of pixel lensing towards M31 I: the density contribution and mass of MACHOs
POINT-AGAPE is an Anglo-French collaboration which is employing the Isaac
Newton Telescope (INT) to conduct a pixel-lensing survey towards M31. In this
paper we investigate what we can learn from pixel-lensing observables about the
MACHO mass and fractional contribution in M31 and the Galaxy for the case of
spherically-symmetric near-isothermal haloes. We employ detailed pixel-lensing
simulations which include many of the factors which affect the observables. For
a maximum MACHO halo we predict an event rate in V of up to 100 per season for
M31 and 40 per season for the Galaxy. However, the Einstein radius crossing
time is generally not measurable and the observed full-width half-maximum
duration provides only a weak tracer of lens mass. Nonetheless, we find that
the near-far asymmetry in the spatial distribution of M31 MACHOs provides
significant information on their mass and density contribution. We present a
likelihood estimator for measuring the fractional contribution and mass of both
M31 and Galaxy MACHOs which permits an unbiased determination to be made of
MACHO parameters, even from data-sets strongly contaminated by variable stars.
If M31 does not have a significant population of MACHOs in the mass range
0.001-1 Solar masses strong limits will result from the first season of INT
observations. Simulations based on currently favoured density and mass values
indicate that, after three seasons, the M31 MACHO parameters should be
constrained to within a factor four uncertainty in halo fraction and an order
of magnitude uncertainty in mass (90% confidence). Interesting constraints on
Galaxy MACHOs may also be possible. For a campaign lasting ten years,
comparable to the lifetime of current LMC surveys, reliable estimates of MACHO
parameters in both galaxies should be possible. (Abridged)Comment: 21 pages, 14 figures. Submitted to MNRA
Search for exoplanets in M31 with pixel-lensing and the PA-99-N2 event revisited
Several exoplanets have been detected towards the Galactic bulge with the
microlensing technique. We show that exoplanets in M31 may also be detected
with the pixel-lensing method, if telescopes making high cadence observations
of an ongoing microlensing event are used. Using a Monte Carlo approach we find
that the mean mass for detectable planetary systems is about .
However, even small mass exoplanets () can cause
significant deviations, which are observable with large telescopes. We
reanalysed the POINT-AGAPE microlensing event PA-99-N2. First, we test the
robustness of the binary lens conclusion for this light curve. Second, we show
that for such long duration and bright microlensing events, the efficiency for
finding planetary-like deviations is strongly enhanced with respect to that
evaluated for all planetary detectable events.Comment: 14 pages, 8 figures. Paper presented at the "II Italian-Pakistani
Workshop on Relativistic Astrophysics, Pescara, July 8-10, 2009. To be
published in a special issue of General Relativity and Gravitation (eds. F.
De Paolis, G.F.R. Ellis, A. Qadir and R. Ruffini
ExELS: an exoplanet legacy science proposal for the ESA Euclid mission. II. Hot exoplanets and sub-stellar systems
The Exoplanet Euclid Legacy Survey (ExELS) proposes to determine the
frequency of cold exoplanets down to Earth mass from host separations of ~1 AU
out to the free-floating regime by detecting microlensing events in Galactic
Bulge. We show that ExELS can also detect large numbers of hot, transiting
exoplanets in the same population. The combined microlensing+transit survey
would allow the first self-consistent estimate of the relative frequencies of
hot and cold sub-stellar companions, reducing biases in comparing "near-field"
radial velocity and transiting exoplanets with "far-field" microlensing
exoplanets. The age of the Bulge and its spread in metallicity further allows
ExELS to better constrain both the variation of companion frequency with
metallicity and statistically explore the strength of star-planet tides.
We conservatively estimate that ExELS will detect ~4100 sub-stellar objects,
with sensitivity typically reaching down to Neptune-mass planets. Of these,
~600 will be detectable in both Euclid's VIS (optical) channel and NISP H-band
imager, with ~90% of detections being hot Jupiters. Likely scenarios predict a
range of 2900-7000 for VIS and 400-1600 for H-band. Twice as many can be
expected in VIS if the cadence can be increased to match the 20-minute H-band
cadence. The separation of planets from brown dwarfs via Doppler boosting or
ellipsoidal variability will be possible in a handful of cases. Radial velocity
confirmation should be possible in some cases, using 30-metre-class telescopes.
We expect secondary eclipses, and reflection and emission from planets to be
detectable in up to ~100 systems in both VIS and NISP-H. Transits of ~500
planetary-radius companions will be characterised with two-colour photometry
and ~40 with four-colour photometry (VIS,YJH), and the albedo of (and emission
from) a large sample of hot Jupiters in the H-band can be explored
statistically.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures, accepted MNRA
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