248 research outputs found
Searching for electromagnetic counterpart of LIGO gravitational waves in the Fermi GBM data with ADWO
The Fermi collaboration identified a possible electromagnetic counterpart of
the gravitational wave event of September 14, 2015. Our goal is to provide an
unsupervised data analysis algorithm to identify similar events in Fermi's
Gamma-ray Burst Monitor CTTE data stream. We are looking for signals that are
typically weak. Therefore, they can only be found by a careful analysis of
count rates of all detectors and energy channels simultaneously. Our
Automatized Detector Weight Optimization (ADWO) method consists of a search for
the signal, and a test of its significance. We developed ADWO, a virtual
detector analysis tool for multi-channel multi-detector signals, and performed
successful searches for short transients in the data-streams. We have
identified GRB150522B, as well as possible electromagnetic candidates of the
transients GW150914 and LVT151012. ADWO is an independently developed,
unsupervised data analysis tool that only relies on the raw data of the Fermi
satellite. It can therefore provide a strong, independent test to any
electromagnetic signal accompanying future gravitational wave observations.Comment: 4 pages and 4 figures, A&A Letters accepte
Revealing a strongly reddened, faint active galactic nucleus population by stacking deep co-added images
More than half of the sources identified by recent radio sky surveys have not been detected by wide-field optical surveys. We present a study, based on our co-added image stacking technique, in which our aim is to detect the optical emission from unresolved, isolated radio sources of the Very Large Array (VLA) Faint Images of the Radio Sky at Twenty-cm (FIRST) survey that have no identified optical counterparts in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Stripe 82 co-added data set. From the FIRST catalogue, 2116 such radio point sources were selected, and cut-out images, centred on the FIRST coordinates, were generated from the Stripe 82 images. The already co-added cut-outs were stacked once again to obtain images of high signal-to-noise ratio, in the hope that optical emission from the radio sources would become detectable. Multiple stacks were generated, based on the radio luminosity of the point sources. The resulting stacked images show central peaks similar to point sources. The peaks have very red colours with steep optical spectral energy distributions. We have found that the optical spectral index α ν falls in the range -2.9 ≤ α ν ≤ -2.2 (Sν∝ναν), depending only weakly on the radio flux. The total integration times of the stacks are between 270 and 300h, and the corresponding 5σ detection limit is estimated to be about m r ≃ 26.6 mag. We argue that the detected light is mainly from the central regions of dust-reddened Type 1 active galactic nuclei. Dust-reddened quasars might represent an early phase of quasar evolution, and thus they can also give us an insight into the formation of massive galaxies. The data used in the paper are available on-line at http://www.vo.elte.hu/doublestacking. © 2012 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2012 RAS
Gamma photometric redshifts for long gamma-ray bursts
It is known that the soft tail of the gamma-ray bursts' spectra show excesses
from the exact power-law dependence. In this article we show that this
departure can be detected in the peak flux ratios of different BATSE DISCSC
energy channels. This effect allows to estimate the redshift of the bright long
gamma-ray bursts in the BATSE Catalog. A verification of these redshifts is
obtained for the 8 GRB which have both BATSE DISCSC data and measured optical
spectroscopic redshifts. There is good correlation between the measured and
esti redshifts, and the average error is . The method is
similar to the photometric redshift estimation of galaxies in the optical
range, hence it can be called as "gamma photometric redshift estimation". The
estimated redshifts for the long bright gamma-ray bursts are up to . For the the faint long bursts - which should be up to - the
redshifts cannot be determined unambiguously with this method.Comment: accepted in A&A, 7 pages incl. 7 figure
A Balaton környéki kisvízfolyások makroszkópikus gerinctelen faunája | On the macroinvertebrate fauna of inflows of lake Balaton
A Balaton környéki kisvízfolyások makroszkópikus gerinctelen faunája kevéssé ismert. Habár számos faunisztikai jellegű gyűjtést végeztek ezen a területen, ezekben a publikációkban csak szórványos adatok találhatók. Dolgozatunkban átfogó irodalmi áttekintést adunk a Balaton környéki patakok makrogerinctelen faunájáról, illetve saját, 2006-ban végzett faunisztikai felmérésünk eredményeit mutatjuk be.
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The aquatic macroinvertebrate fauna of streams in the catchment area of Lake Balaton is poorly known. Although there were carried out many faunistical investigation in this area, only sporadic data can be found in the literature. In this paper a compilation is given on the macroinvertebrate fauna of streams of Lake Balaton, and the results of own faunistical investigations carried out in 2006 are presented
Two novel approaches for photometric redshift estimation based on SDSS and 2MASS databases
We investigate two training-set methods: support vector machines (SVMs) and
Kernel Regression (KR) for photometric redshift estimation with the data from
the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 5 and Two Micron All Sky Survey
databases. We probe the performances of SVMs and KR for different input
patterns. Our experiments show that the more parameters considered, the
accuracy doesn't always increase, and only when appropriate parameters chosen,
the accuracy can improve. Moreover for different approaches, the best input
pattern is different. With different parameters as input, the optimal bandwidth
is dissimilar for KR. The rms errors of photometric redshifts based on SVM and
KR methods are less than 0.03 and 0.02, respectively. Finally the strengths and
weaknesses of the two approaches are summarized. Compared to other methods of
estimating photometric redshifts, they show their superiorities, especially KR,
in terms of accuracy.Comment: accepted for publication in ChJA
The Wyoming Survey for H-alpha. I. Initial Results at z ~ 0.16 and 0.24
The Wyoming Survey for H-alpha, or WySH, is a large-area, ground-based,
narrowband imaging survey for H-alpha-emitting galaxies over the latter half of
the age of the Universe. The survey spans several square degrees in a set of
fields of low Galactic cirrus emission. The observing program focuses on
multiple dz~0.02 epochs from z~0.16 to z~0.81 down to a uniform
(continuum+line) luminosity at each epoch of ~10^33 W uncorrected for
extinction (3sigma for a 3" diameter aperture). First results are presented
here for 98+208 galaxies observed over approximately 2 square degrees at
redshifts z~0.16 and 0.24, including preliminary luminosity functions at these
two epochs. These data clearly show an evolution with lookback time in the
volume-averaged cosmic star formation rate. Integrals of Schechter fits to the
extinction-corrected H-alpha luminosity functions indicate star formation rates
per co-moving volume of 0.009 and 0.014 h_70 M_sun/yr/Mpc^3 at z~0.16 and 0.24,
respectively. The formal uncertainties in the Schechter fits, based on this
initial subset of the survey, correspond to uncertainties in the cosmic star
formation rate density at the >~40% level; the tentative uncertainty due to
cosmic variance is 25%, estimated from separately carrying out the analysis on
data from the first two fields with substantial datasets.Comment: To appear in the Astronomical Journa
Long-term power-law fluctuation in Internet traffic
Power-law fluctuation in observed Internet packet flow are discussed. The
data is obtained by a multi router traffic grapher (MRTG) system for 9 months.
The internet packet flow is analyzed using the detrended fluctuation analysis.
By extracting the average daily trend, the data shows clear power-law
fluctuations. The exponents of the fluctuation for the incoming and outgoing
flow are almost unity. Internet traffic can be understood as a daily periodic
flow with power-law fluctuations.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figure
Galaxy clusters at high redshift and evolution of brightest cluster galaxies
Identification of high redshift clusters is important for studies of
cosmology and cluster evolution. Using photometric redshifts of galaxies, we
identify 631 clusters from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT) Wide
field, 202 clusters from the CHFT Deep field, 187 clusters from the Cosmic
Evolution Survey (COSMOS) and 737 clusters from the Spitzer Wide-area InfraRed
Extragalactic survey (SWIRE) field. The redshifts of these clusters are in the
range of 0.1<z<1.6. Merging these cluster samples gives 1644 clusters in the
four survey fields, of which 1088 are newly identified and more than half are
from the large SWIRE field. Among 228 clusters of z>1, 191 clusters are newly
identified, and most of them from the SWIRE field. With this large sample of
high redshift clusters, we study the color evolution of the brightest cluster
galaxies (BCGs). The colors r'-z' and r^+-m_{3.6\mu m} of the BCGs are
consistent with a stellar population synthesis model in which the BCGs are
formed at redshift z_f>2 and evolved passively. The colors g'-z' and
B-m_{3.6\mu m} of the BCGs at redshifts z>0.8 are systematically bluer than the
passive evolution model for galaxy formed at z_f~2, indicating star formation
in high redshift BCGs.Comment: 10 pages, 14 figures, 2 tables; added reference, corrected typos;
Table 2 is available at http://zmtt.bao.ac.cn/wzl/CV_wen.ht
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