8,592 research outputs found
Inhomogeneous reionization and the polarization of the cosmic microwave background
In a universe with inhomogeneous reionization, the ionized patches create a
second order signal in the cosmic microwave background polarization anisotropy.
This signal originates in the coupling of the free electron fluctuation to the
quadruple moment of the temperature anisotropy. We examine the contribution
from a simple inhomogeneous reionization model and find that the signal from
such a process is below the detectable limits of the Planck Surveyor mission.
However t he signal is above the fundamental uncertainty limit from cosmic
variance, so th at a future detection with a high accuracy experiment on
sub-arcminute scales is possible.Comment: 10 pages, 2 eps figures, final version accepted for publication in
ApJ Letter
Cosmic Microwave Background Anisotropy Window Functions Revisited
The primary results of most observations of cosmic microwave background (CMB)
anisotropy are estimates of the angular power spectrum averaged through some
broad band, called band-powers. These estimates are in turn what are used to
produce constraints on cosmological parameters due to all CMB observations.
Essential to this estimation of cosmological parameters is the calculation of
the expected band-power for a given experiment, given a theoretical power
spectrum. Here we derive the "band power" window function which should be used
for this calculation, and point out that it is not equivalent to the window
function used to calculate the variance. This important distinction has been
absent from much of the literature: the variance window function is often used
as the band-power window function. We discuss the validity of this assumed
equivalence, the role of window functions for experiments that constrain the
power in {\it multiple} bands, and summarize a prescription for reporting
experimental results. The analysis methods detailed here are applied in a
companion paper to three years of data from the Medium Scale Anisotropy
Measurement.Comment: 5 pages, 1 included .eps figure, PRD in press---final published
versio
A limit on the detectability of the energy scale of inflation
We show that the polarization of the cosmic microwave background can be used
to detect gravity waves from inflation if the energy scale of inflation is
above 3.2 times 10^15 GeV. These gravity waves generate polarization patterns
with a curl, whereas (to first order in perturbation theory) density
perturbations do not. The limiting ``noise'' arises from the second--order
generation of curl from density perturbations, or rather residuals from its
subtraction. We calculate optimal sky coverage and detectability limits as a
function of detector sensitivity and observing time.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, submitted to PR
Measuring Fluctuating Pressure Levels and Vibration Response in a Jet Plume
The characterization of loads due to solid rocket motor plume impingement allows for moreaccurate analyses of components subjected to such an environment. Typically, test verification of predicted loads due to these conditions is widely overlooked or unsuccessful. ATA Engineering, Inc., performed testing during a solid rocket motor firing to obtain acceleration and pressure responses in the hydrodynamic field surrounding the jet plume. The test environment necessitated a robust design to facilitate measurements being made in close proximity to the jet plume. This paper presents the process of designing a test fixture and an instrumentation package that could withstand the solid rocket plume environment and protect the required instrumentation
Social Responsibility, Librarianship, and the ALA: The 2015 Banned Books Week Poster Controversy
This article explores the recent controversy over the American Library Associationâs poster for Banned Books Week. In particular, this article connects the 2015 controversy to broader historical issues and tensions within American librarianship concerning social responsibilities. The researchers used a qualitative approach, conducting telephone interviews with 26 individuals. The interviews were recorded, transcribed, and analyzed deductively. The interviews revealed deep continuing tensions regarding American librarianshipâs relationship to responsibilities. First, there is some dissatisfaction with the American Library Association and its Office for Intellectual Freedom. Second, there are competing conceptualizations of censorship and how to apply these differing meanings while remaining socially responsible. Third, there is uncertainty about how to appropriately act as an ally, within librarianship, to marginalized peoples
The Compact UV Nucleus of M33
The most luminous X-ray source in the Local Group is associated with the
nucleus of M33. This source, M33 X-8, appears modulated by ~20% over a ~106 day
period, making it unlikely that the combined emission from unresolved sources
could explain the otherwise persistent ~1e39 erg/s X-ray flux (Dubus et al.
1997, Hernquist et al. 1991). We present here high resolution UV imaging of the
nucleus with the Planetary Camera of the HST undertaken in order to search for
the counterpart to X-8. The nucleus is bluer and more compact than at longer
wavelength images but it is still extended with half of its 3e38 erg/s UV
luminosity coming from the inner 0.14". We cannot distinguish between a
concentrated blue population and emission from a single object.Comment: 3 figures, accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Removing point sources from CMB maps
For high-precision cosmic microwave background (CMB) experiments,
contamination from extragalactic point sources is a major concern. It is
therefore useful to be able to detect and discard point source contaminated
pixels using the map itself. We show that the sensitivity with which this can
be done can often be greatly improved (by factors between 2.5 and 18 for the
upcoming Planck mission) by a customized hi-pass filtering that suppresses
fluctuations due to CMB and diffuse galactic foregrounds. This means that point
source contamination will not severely degrade the cleanest Planck channels
unless current source count estimates are off by more than an order of
magnitude. A catalog of around 40,000 far infra-red sources at 857 GHz may be a
useful by-product of Planck.Comment: 4 pages, with 2 figures included. Minor revisions to match accepted
version. Color figure and links at http://www.sns.ias.edu/~max/cleaning.html
(faster from the US), from http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~max/cleaning.html
(faster from Europe) or from [email protected], and Angelica's foreground links at
http://www.sns.ias.edu/~angelica/foreground.htm
Sensitivity of a Bolometric Interferometer to the CMB power spectrum
Context. The search for B-mode polarization fluctuations in the Cosmic
Microwave Background is one of the main challenges of modern cosmology. The
expected level of the B-mode signal is very low and therefore requires the
development of highly sensitive instruments with low systematic errors. An
appealing possibility is bolometric interferometry. Aims. We compare in this
article the sensitivity on the CMB angular power spectrum achieved with direct
imaging, heterodyne and bolometric interferometry. Methods. Using a simple
power spectrum estimator, we calculate its variance leading to the counterpart
for bolometric interferometry of the well known Knox formula for direct
imaging. Results. We find that bolometric interferometry is less sensitive than
direct imaging. However, as expected, it is finally more sensitive than
heterodyne interferometry due to the low noise of the bolometers. It therefore
appears as an alternative to direct imagers with different and possibly lower
systematic errors, mainly due to the absence of an optical setup in front of
the horns.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures. This last version matches the published version
(Astronomy and Astrophysics 491 3 (2008) 923-927). Sensitivity of Heterodyne
Interferometers modified by a factor of tw
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