49 research outputs found
Fast Calculation of the Lomb-Scargle Periodogram Using Graphics Processing Units
I introduce a new code for fast calculation of the Lomb-Scargle periodogram,
that leverages the computing power of graphics processing units (GPUs). After
establishing a background to the newly emergent field of GPU computing, I
discuss the code design and narrate key parts of its source. Benchmarking
calculations indicate no significant differences in accuracy compared to an
equivalent CPU-based code. However, the differences in performance are
pronounced; running on a low-end GPU, the code can match 8 CPU cores, and on a
high-end GPU it is faster by a factor approaching thirty. Applications of the
code include analysis of long photometric time series obtained by ongoing
satellite missions and upcoming ground-based monitoring facilities; and
Monte-Carlo simulation of periodogram statistical properties.Comment: Accepted by ApJ. Accompanying program source (updated since
acceptance) can be downloaded from
http://www.astro.wisc.edu/~townsend/resource/download/code/culsp.tar.g
3D Reconstruction of the Density Field: An SVD Approach to Weak Lensing Tomography
We present a new method for constructing three-dimensional mass maps from
gravitational lensing shear data. We solve the lensing inversion problem using
truncation of singular values (within the context of generalized least squares
estimation) without a priori assumptions about the statistical nature of the
signal. This singular value framework allows a quantitative comparison between
different filtering methods: we evaluate our method beside the previously
explored Wiener filter approaches. Our method yields near-optimal angular
resolution of the lensing reconstruction and allows cluster sized halos to be
de-blended robustly. It allows for mass reconstructions which are 2-3
orders-of-magnitude faster than the Wiener filter approach; in particular, we
estimate that an all-sky reconstruction with arcminute resolution could be
performed on a time-scale of hours. We find however that linear, non-parametric
reconstructions have a fundamental limitation in the resolution achieved in the
redshift direction.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap
Dynamical Capture Binary Neutron Star Mergers
We study dynamical capture binary neutron star mergers as may arise in dense
stellar regions such as globular clusters. Using general-relativistic
hydrodynamics, we find that these mergers can result in the prompt collapse to
a black hole or in the formation of a hypermassive neutron star, depending not
only on the neutron star equation of state but also on impact parameter. We
also find that these mergers can produce accretion disks of up to a tenth of a
solar mass and unbound ejected material of up to a few percent of a solar mass.
We comment on the gravitational radiation and electromagnetic transients that
these sources may produce.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures; revised to match published versio
Transit surveys for Earths in the habitable zones of white dwarfs
To date the search for habitable Earth-like planets has primarily focused on
nuclear burning stars. I propose that this search should be expanded to cool
white dwarf stars that have expended their nuclear fuel. I define the
continuously habitable zone of white dwarfs, and show that it extends from
~0.005 to 0.02 AU for white dwarfs with masses from 0.4 to 0.9 solar masses,
temperatures less than 10,000 K, and habitable durations of at least 3 Gyr. As
they are similar in size to Earth, white dwarfs may be deeply eclipsed by
terrestrial planets that orbit edge-on, which can easily be detected with
ground-based telescopes. If planets can migrate inward or reform near white
dwarfs, I show that a global robotic telescope network could carry out a
transit survey of nearby white dwarfs placing interesting constraints on the
presence of habitable Earths. If planets were detected, I show that the survey
would favor detection of planets similar to Earth: similar size, temperature,
rotation period, and host star temperatures similar to the Sun. The Large
Synoptic Survey Telescope could place even tighter constraints on the frequency
of habitable Earths around white dwarfs. The confirmation and characterization
of these planets might be carried out with large ground and space telescopes.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, published in ApJL; Figure 4 corrected, other
minor change
Collisional Evolution of Ultra-Wide Trans-Neptunian Binaries
The widely-separated, near-equal mass binaries hosted by the cold Classical
Kuiper Belt are delicately bound and subject to disruption by many perturbing
processes. We use analytical arguments and numerical simulations to determine
their collisional lifetimes given various impactor size distributions, and
include the effects of mass-loss and multiple impacts over the lifetime of each
system. These collisional lifetimes constrain the population of small (R > ~1
km) objects currently residing in the Kuiper Belt, and confirm that the size
distribution slope at small size cannot be excessively steep - likely q < ~3.5.
We track mutual semi-major axis, inclination, and eccentricity evolution
through our simulations, and show that it is unlikely that the wide binary
population represents an evolved tail of the primordially-tight binary
population. We find that if the wide binaries are a collisionally-eroded
population, their primordial mutual orbit planes must have preferred to lie in
the plane of the solar system. Finally, we find that current limits on the size
distribution at small radii remain high enough that the prospect of detecting
dust-producing collisions in real-time in the Kuiper Belt with future optical
surveys is feasible.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Cosmological parameter constraints from galaxy–galaxy lensing and galaxy clustering with the SDSS DR7
Recent studies have shown that the cross-correlation coefficient between galaxies and dark matter is very close to unity on scales outside a few virial radii of galaxy haloes, independent of the details of how galaxies populate dark matter haloes. This finding makes it possible to determine the dark matter clustering from measurements of galaxy–galaxy weak lensing and galaxy clustering. We present new cosmological parameter constraints based on large-scale measurements of spectroscopic galaxy samples from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) data release 7. We generalize the approach of Baldauf et al. to remove small-scale information (below 2 and 4 h^(−1) Mpc for lensing and clustering measurements, respectively), where the cross-correlation coefficient differs from unity. We derive constraints for three galaxy samples covering 7131 deg^2, containing 69 150, 62 150 and 35 088 galaxies with mean redshifts of 0.11, 0.28 and 0.40. We clearly detect scale-dependent galaxy bias for the more luminous galaxy samples, at a level consistent with theoretical expectations. When we vary both σ_8 and Ω_m (and marginalize over non-linear galaxy bias) in a flat Λ cold dark matter model, the best-constrained quantity is σ_8(Ω_m/0.25)^(0.57) = 0.80 ± 0.05 (1σ, stat. + sys.), where statistical and systematic errors (photometric redshift and shear calibration) have comparable contributions, and we have fixed n_s = 0.96 and h = 0.7. These strong constraints on the matter clustering suggest that this method is competitive with cosmic shear in current data, while having very complementary and in some ways less serious systematics. We therefore expect that this method will play a prominent role in future weak lensing surveys. When we combine these data with Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe 7-year (WMAP7) cosmic microwave background (CMB) data, constraints on σ_8, Ω_m, H_0, w_(de) and ∑m_ν become 30–80 per cent tighter than with CMB data alone, since our data break several parameter degeneracies
Expected Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) Yield of Eclipsing Binary Stars
In this paper we estimate the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) yield of
eclipsing binary stars, which will survey ~20,000 square degrees of the
southern sky during the period of 10 years in 6 photometric passbands to r ~
24.5. We generate a set of 10,000 eclipsing binary light curves sampled to the
LSST time cadence across the whole sky, with added noise as a function of
apparent magnitude. This set is passed to the Analysis of Variance (AoV) period
finder to assess the recoverability rate for the periods, and the successfully
phased light curves are passed to the artificial intelligence-based pipeline
EBAI to assess the recoverability rate in terms of the eclipsing binaries'
physical and geometric parameters. We find that, out of ~24 million eclipsing
binaries observed by LSST with S/N>10 in mission life-time, ~28% or 6.7 million
can be fully characterized by the pipeline. Of those, ~25% or 1.7 million will
be double-lined binaries, a true treasure trove for stellar astrophysics.Comment: 19 pages, 7 figures. Accepted to AJ, to appear in issue 142:2 (Aug
2011
Characterizing and Propagating Modeling Uncertainties in Photometrically-Derived Redshift Distributions
The uncertainty in the redshift distributions of galaxies has a significant
potential impact on the cosmological parameter values inferred from multi-band
imaging surveys. The accuracy of the photometric redshifts measured in these
surveys depends not only on the quality of the flux data, but also on a number
of modeling assumptions that enter into both the training set and SED fitting
methods of photometric redshift estimation. In this work we focus on the
latter, considering two types of modeling uncertainties: uncertainties in the
SED template set and uncertainties in the magnitude and type priors used in a
Bayesian photometric redshift estimation method. We find that SED template
selection effects dominate over magnitude prior errors. We introduce a method
for parameterizing the resulting ignorance of the redshift distributions, and
for propagating these uncertainties to uncertainties in cosmological
parameters.Comment: 13 pages, 12 figures, version published in Ap
Characterization of Seven Ultra-Wide Trans-Neptunian Binaries
The low-inclination component of the Classical Kuiper Belt is host to a
population of extremely widely-separated binaries. These systems are similar to
other Trans-Neptunian binaries (TNBs) in that the primary and secondary
components of each system are of roughly equal size. We have performed an
astrometric monitoring campaign of a sample of seven wide-separation,
long-period TNBs and present the first-ever well-characterized mutual orbits
for each system. The sample contains the most eccentric (2006 CH69, e=0.9) and
the most widely-separated, weakly bound (2001 QW322, a/Rh~0.22) binary minor
planets known, and also contains the system with lowest-measured mass of any
TNB (2000 CF105, M~1.85E17 kg). Four systems orbit in a prograde sense, and
three in a retrograde sense. They have a different mutual inclination
distribution compared to all other TNBs, preferring low mutual-inclination
orbits. These systems have geometric r-band albedos in the range of 0.09-0.3,
consistent with radiometric albedo estimates for larger solitary
low-inclination Classical Kuiper Belt objects, and we limit the plausible
distribution of albedos in this region of the Kuiper Belt. We find that
gravitational collapse binary formation models produce a similar orbital
distribution to that currently observed, which along with a confluence of other
factors supports formation of the cold Classical Kuiper Belt in situ through
relatively rapid gravitational collapse rather than slow hierarchical
accretion. We show that these binary systems are sensitive to disruption via
collisions, and their existence suggests that the size distribution of TNOs at
small sizes remains relatively shallow.Comment: 22 pages, 14 Figures, in press in the Astrophysical Journal, updated
to reflect bibliographic corrections and additional table added in proo
The reliability of the AIC method in Cosmological Model Selection
The Akaike information criterion (AIC) has been used as a statistical
criterion to compare the appropriateness of different dark energy candidate
models underlying a particular data set. Under suitable conditions, the AIC is
an indirect estimate of the Kullback-Leibler divergence D(T//A) of a candidate
model A with respect to the truth T. Thus, a dark energy model with a smaller
AIC is ranked as a better model, since it has a smaller Kullback-Leibler
discrepancy with T. In this paper, we explore the impact of statistical errors
in estimating the AIC during model comparison. Using a parametric bootstrap
technique, we study the distribution of AIC differences between a set of
candidate models due to different realizations of noise in the data and show
that the shape and spread of this distribution can be quite varied. We also
study the rate of success of the AIC procedure for different values of a
threshold parameter popularly used in the literature. For plausible choices of
true dark energy models, our studies suggest that investigating such
distributions of AIC differences in addition to the threshold is useful in
correctly interpreting comparisons of dark energy models using the AIC
technique.Comment: Figures and further discussions of the results were added, and the
version matches the version published in MNRA