3,960 research outputs found
Measuring the 3D Clustering of Undetected Galaxies Through Cross Correlation of their Cumulative Flux Fluctuations from Multiple Spectral Lines
We discuss a method for detecting the emission from high redshift galaxies by
cross correlating flux fluctuations from multiple spectral lines. If one can
fit and subtract away the continuum emission with a smooth function of
frequency, the remaining signal contains fluctuations of flux with frequency
and angle from line emitting galaxies. Over a particular small range of
observed frequencies, these fluctuations will originate from sources
corresponding to a series of different redshifts, one for each emission line.
It is possible to statistically isolate the fluctuations at a particular
redshift by cross correlating emission originating from the same redshift, but
in different emission lines. This technique will allow detection of clustering
fluctuations from the faintest galaxies which individually cannot be detected,
but which contribute substantially to the total signal due to their large
numbers. We describe these fluctuations quantitatively through the line cross
power spectrum. As an example of a particular application of this technique, we
calculate the signal-to-noise ratio for a measurement of the cross power
spectrum of the OI(63 micron) and OIII(52 micron) fine structure lines with the
proposed Space Infrared Telescope for Cosmology and Astrophysics. We find that
the cross power spectrum can be measured beyond a redshift of z=8. Such
observations could constrain the evolution of the metallicity, bias, and duty
cycle of faint galaxies at high redshifts and may also be sensitive to the
reionization history through its effect on the minimum mass of galaxies. As
another example, we consider the cross power spectrum of CO line emission
measured with a large ground based telescope like CCAT and 21-cm radiation
originating from hydrogen in galaxies after reionization with an interferometer
similar in scale to MWA, but optimized for post-reionization redshifts.Comment: 21 pages, 6 figures; Replaced with version accepted by JCAP; Added an
example of cross correlating CO line emission and 21cm line emission from
galaxies after reionizatio
Imprint of Inhomogeneous Reionization on the Power Spectrum of Galaxy Surveys at High Redshifts
We consider the effects of inhomogeneous reionization on the distribution of
galaxies at high redshifts. Modulation of the formation process of the ionizing
sources by large scale density modes makes reionization inhomogeneous and
introduces a spread to the reionization times of different regions with the
same size. After sources photo-ionize and heat these regions to a temperature
\ga 10^4K at different times, their temperatures evolve as the ionized
intergalactic medium (IGM) expands. The varying IGM temperature makes the
minimum mass of galaxies spatially non-uniform with a fluctuation amplitude
that increases towards small scales. These scale-dependent fluctuations modify
the shape of the power spectrum of low-mass galaxies at high redshifts in a way
that depends on the history of reionization. The resulting distortion of the
primordial power spectrum is significantly larger than changes associated with
uncertainties in the inflationary parameters, such as the spectral index of the
scalar power spectrum or the running of the spectral index. Future surveys of
high-redshift galaxies will offer a new probe of the thermal history of the IGM
but might have a more limited scope in constraining inflation.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figures, replaced to match version accepted by Ap
Formation of the First Supermassive Black Holes
We consider the physical conditions under which supermassive black holes
could have formed inside the first galaxies. Our SPH simulations indicate that
metal-free galaxies with a virial temperature ~10^4 K and with suppressed H2
formation (due to an intergalactic UV background) tend to form a binary black
hole system which contains a substantial fraction (>10%) of the total baryonic
mass of the host galaxy. Fragmentation into stars is suppressed without
substantial H2 cooling. Our simulations follow the condensation of ~5x10^6
M_sun around the two centers of the binary down to a scale of < 0.1pc. Low-spin
galaxies form a single black hole instead. These early black holes lead to
quasar activity before the epoch of reionization. Primordial black hole
binaries lead to the emission of gravitational radiation at redshifts z>10 that
would be detectable by LISA.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, revised version, ApJ in press (October 10, 2003
Best-Bet Astrophysical Neutrino Sources
Likely astrophysical sources of detectable high-energy (>> TeV) neutrinos are
considered. Based on gamma-ray emission properties, the most probable sources
of neutrinos are argued to be GRBs, blazars, microquasars, and supernova
remnants. Diffuse neutrino sources are also briefly considered.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures, in Proc. of TeV-Particle Astrophysics II,
Madison, WI, 28-31 Aug, 200
Herd effect from influenza vaccination in non-healthcare settings: a systematic review of randomised controlled trials and observational studies.
Influenza vaccination programmes are assumed to have a herd effect and protect contacts of vaccinated persons from influenza virus infection. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Global Health and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) from inception to March 2014 for studies assessing the protective effect of influenza vaccination vs no vaccination on influenza virus infections in contacts. We calculated odds ratios (ORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) using a random-effects model. Of 43,082 screened articles, nine randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and four observational studies were eligible. Among the RCTs, no statistically significant herd effect on the occurrence of influenza in contacts could be found (OR: 0.62; 95% CI: 0.34-1.12). The one RCT conducted in a community setting, however, showed a significant effect (OR: 0.39; 95% CI: 0.26-0.57), as did the observational studies (OR: 0.57; 95% CI: 0.43-0.77). We found only a few studies that quantified the herd effect of vaccination, all studies except one were conducted in children, and the overall evidence was graded as low. The evidence is too limited to conclude in what setting(s) a herd effect may or may not be achieved
On the Detectability of the Hydrogen 3-cm Fine Structure Line from the EoR
A soft ultraviolet radiation field, 10.2 eV < E <13.6 eV, that permeates
neutral intergalactic gas during the Epoch of Reionization (EoR) excites the 2p
(directly) and 2s (indirectly) states of atomic hydrogen. Because the 2s state
is metastable, the lifetime of atoms in this level is relatively long, which
may cause the 2s state to be overpopulated relative to the 2p state. It has
recently been proposed that for this reason, neutral intergalactic atomic
hydrogen gas may be detected in absorption in its 3-cm fine-structure line
(2s_1/2 -> 2p_3/2) against the Cosmic Microwave Background out to very high
redshifts. In particular, the optical depth in the fine-structure line through
neutral intergalactic gas surrounding bright quasars during the EoR may reach
tau~1e-5. The resulting surface brightness temperature of tens of micro K (in
absorption) may be detectable with existing radio telescopes. Motivated by this
exciting proposal, we perform a detailed analysis of the transfer of Lyman
beta,gamma,delta,... radiation, and re-analyze the detectability of the
fine-structure line in neutral intergalactic gas surrounding high-redshift
quasars. We find that proper radiative transfer modeling causes the
fine-structure absorption signature to be reduced tremendously to tau< 1e-10.
We therefore conclude that neutral intergalactic gas during the EoR cannot
reveal its presence in the 3-cm fine-structure line to existing radio
telescopes.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figures, MNRAS in press; v2. some typos fixe
Spectroscopic Constraints on the Surface Magnetic Field of the Accreting Neutron Star EXO 0748-676
Gravitationally redshifted absorption lines of Fe XXVI, Fe XXV, and O VIII
were inferred recently in the X-ray spectrum of the bursting neutron star EXO
0748-676. We place an upper limit on the stellar magnetic field based on the
iron lines. The oxygen absorption feature shows a multiple component profile
that is consistent with Zeeman splitting in a magnetic field of ~(1-2)x10^9
gauss, and for which the corresponding Zeeman components of the iron lines are
expected to be blended together. In other systems, a field strength >5x10^{10}
gauss could induce a blueshift of the line centroids that would counteract
gravitational redshift and complicate the derivation of constraints on the
equation of state of the neutron star.Comment: 5 pages, submitted to Phys. Rev. Let
The Photo-Evaporation of Dwarf Galaxies During Reionization
During the period of reionization the Universe was filled with a cosmological
background of ionizing radiation. By that time a significant fraction of the
cosmic gas had already been incorporated into collapsed galactic halos with
virial temperatures below about 10000 K that were unable to cool efficiently.
We show that photoionization of this gas by the fresh cosmic UV background
boiled the gas out of the gravitational potential wells of its host halos. We
calculate the photoionization heating of gas inside spherically symmetric dark
matter halos, and assume that gas which is heated above its virial temperature
is expelled. In popular Cold Dark Matter models, the Press-Schechter halo
abundance implies that about 50-90% of the collapsed gas was evaporated at
reionization. The gas originated from halos below a threshold circular velocity
of 10-15 km/s. The resulting outflows from the dwarf galaxy population at
redshifts 5-10 affected the metallicity, thermal and hydrodynamic state of the
surrounding intergalactic medium. Our results suggest that stellar systems with
a velocity dispersion below about 10 km/s, such as globular clusters or the
dwarf spheroidal galaxies of the Local Group, did not form directly through
cosmological collapse at high redshifts.Comment: 29 pages, 7 PostScript figures, accepted for ApJ. Final version,
revised due to referee comments. Figures 6 & 7 have been corrected for a
small numerical erro
Constraining Parity Violation in Gravity with Measurements of Neutron-Star Moments of Inertia
Neutron stars are sensitive laboratories for testing general relativity,
especially when considering deviations where velocities are relativistic and
gravitational fields are strong. One such deviation is described by dynamical,
Chern-Simons modified gravity, where the Einstein-Hilbert action is modified
through the addition of the gravitational parity-violating Pontryagin density
coupled to a field. This four-dimensional effective theory arises naturally
both in perturbative and non-perturbative string theory, loop quantum gravity,
and generic effective field theory expansions. We calculate here Chern-Simons
modifications to the properties and gravitational fields of slowly spinning
neutron stars. We find that the Chern-Simons correction affects only the
gravitomagnetic sector of the metric to leading order, thus introducing
modifications to the moment of inertia but not to the mass-radius relation. We
show that an observational determination of the moment of inertia to an
accuracy of 10%, as is expected from near-future observations of the double
pulsar, will place a constraint on the Chern-Simons coupling constant of
\xi^{1/4} < 5 km, which is at least three-orders of magnitude stronger than the
previous strongest bound.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, replaced with version accepted for publication
in Phys. Rev.
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