1,330 research outputs found
Global Distribution of Water Vapor and Cloud Cover--Sites for High Performance THz Applications
Absorption of terahertz radiation by atmospheric water vapor is a serious
impediment for radio astronomy and for long-distance communications.
Transmission in the THz regime is dependent almost exclusively on atmospheric
precipitable water vapor (PWV). Though much of the Earth has PWV that is too
high for good transmission above 200 GHz, there are a number of dry sites with
very low attenuation. We performed a global analysis of PWV with
high-resolution measurements from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectrometer
(MODIS) on two NASA Earth Observing System (EOS) satellites over the year of
2011. We determined PWV and cloud cover distributions and then developed a
model to find transmission and atmospheric radiance as well as necessary
integration times in the various windows. We produced global maps over the
common THz windows for astronomical and satellite communications scenarios.
Notably, we show that up through 1 THz, systems could be built in excellent
sites of Chile, Greenland and the Tibetan Plateau, while Antarctic performance
is good to 1.6 THz. For a ground-to-space communication link up through 847
GHz, we found several sites in the Continental United States where mean
atmospheric attenuation is less than 40 dB; not an insurmountable challenge for
a link.Comment: 15 pages, 23 figure
Recommended from our members
Where do electronic markets come from? Regulation and the transformation of financial exchanges
The practices of high-frequency trading (HFT) are dependent on automated financial markets, especially those produced by securities exchanges electronically interconnected with competing exchanges. How did this infrastructural and organizational state of affairs come to be? Employing the conceptual distinction between fixed-role and switch-role markets, we analyse the discourse surrounding the design and eventual approval of the Securities and Exchange Commission’s Regulation of Exchanges and Alternative Trading Systems (Reg ATS). We find that the disruption of the exchange industry at the hands of automated markets was produced through an interweaving of both technological and political change. This processual redefinition of the ‘exchange’, in addition, may provide a suggestive precedent for understanding contemporary regulatory crises generated by other digital marketplace platforms
Wigner Crystalline Edges in nu < 1 Quantum Dots
We investigate the edge reconstruction phenomenon believed to occur in
quantum dots in the quantum Hall regime when the filling fraction is nu < 1.
Our approach involves the examination of large dots (< 40 electrons) using a
partial diagonalization technique in which the occupancies of the deep interior
orbitals are frozen. To interpret the results of this calculation, we evaluate
the overlap between the diagonalized ground state and a set of trial
wavefunctions which we call projected necklace (PN) states. A PN state is
simply the angular momentum projection of a maximum density droplet surrounded
by a ring of localized electrons. Our calculations reveal that PN states have
up to 99% overlap with the diagonalized ground states, and are lower in energy
than the states identified in Chamon and Wen's study of the edge
reconstruction.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev.
The COBE Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment Search for the Cosmic Infrared Background: I. Limits and Detections
The DIRBE on the COBE spacecraft was designed primarily to conduct systematic
search for an isotropic CIB in ten photometric bands from 1.25 to 240 microns.
The results of that search are presented here. Conservative limits on the CIB
are obtained from the minimum observed brightness in all-sky maps at each
wavelength, with the faintest limits in the DIRBE spectral range being at 3.5
microns (\nu I_\nu < 64 nW/m^2/sr, 95% CL) and at 240 microns (\nu I_\nu < 28
nW/m^2/sr, 95% CL). The bright foregrounds from interplanetary dust scattering
and emission, stars, and interstellar dust emission are the principal
impediments to the DIRBE measurements of the CIB. These foregrounds have been
modeled and removed from the sky maps. Assessment of the random and systematic
uncertainties in the residuals and tests for isotropy show that only the 140
and 240 microns data provide candidate detections of the CIB. The residuals and
their uncertainties provide CIB upper limits more restrictive than the dark sky
limits at wavelengths from 1.25 to 100 microns. No plausible solar system or
Galactic source of the observed 140 and 240 microns residuals can be
identified, leading to the conclusion that the CIB has been detected at levels
of \nu I_\nu = 25+-7 and 14+-3 nW/m^2/sr at 140 and 240 microns respectively.
The integrated energy from 140 to 240 microns, 10.3 nW/m^2/sr, is about twice
the integrated optical light from the galaxies in the Hubble Deep Field,
suggesting that star formation might have been heavily enshrouded by dust at
high redshift. The detections and upper limits reported here provide new
constraints on models of the history of energy-releasing processes and dust
production since the decoupling of the cosmic microwave background from matter.Comment: 26 pages and 5 figures, accepted for publication in the Astrophyical
Journa
Counterintuitive transitions in the multistate Landau-Zener problem with linear level crossings
We generalize the Brundobler-Elser hypothesis in the multistate Landau-Zener
problem to the case when instead of a state with the highest slope of the
diabatic energy level there is a band of states with an arbitrary number of
parallel levels having the same slope. We argue that the probabilities of
counterintuitive transitions among such states are exactly zero.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figure
Cosmic microwave background polarization, Faraday rotation and stochastic gravity-waves backgrounds
A magnetic field, coherent over the horizon size at the decoupling and strong
enough to rotate the polarization plane of the CMBR, can be generated from the
electromagnetic vacuum fluctuations amplified by the space-time evolution of
the dilaton coupling. The possible relevance of this result for superstring
inspired cosmological models is discussed. Particular attention will be paid to
the connection between Faraday rotation signals and stochastic gravity-wave
backgrounds.Comment: 24 A4 pages in Latex style plus two figures combined into an eps
file, accepted for publication in Physical Review
Stellar population and dust extinction in an ultraluminous infrared galaxy at z=1.135
We present the detailed optical to far-infrared observations of SST
J1604+4304, an ULIRG at z = 1.135. Analyzing the stellar absorption lines,
namely, the CaII H & K and Balmer H lines in the optical spectrum, we derive
the upper limits of an age for the stellar population. Given this constraint,
the minimum {chi}^2 method is used to fit the stellar population models to the
observed SED from 0.44 to 5.8um. We find the following properties. The stellar
population has an age 40 - 200 Myr with a metallicity 2.5 Z_{sun}. The
starlight is reddened by E(B-V) = 0.8. The reddening is caused by the
foreground dust screen, indicating that dust is depleted in the starburst site
and the starburst site is surrounded by a dust shell. The infrared (8-1000um)
luminosity is L_{ir} = 1.78 +/- 0.63 * 10^{12} L_{sun}. This is two times
greater than that expected from the observed starlight, suggesting either that
1/2 of the starburst site is completely obscured at UV-optical wavelengths, or
that 1/2 of L_{ir} comes from AGN emission. The inferred dust mass is 2.0 +/-
1.0 * 10^8 M_{sun}. This is sufficient to form a shell surrounding the galaxy
with an optical depth E(B-V) = 0.8. From our best stellar population model - an
instantaneous starburst with an age 40 Myr, we infer the rate of 19
supernovae(SNe) per year. Simply analytical models imply that 2.5 Z_{sun} in
stars was reached when the gas mass reduced to 30% of the galaxy mass. The gas
metallcity is 4.8 Z_{sun} at this point. The gas-to-dust mass ratio is then 120
+/- 73. The inferred dust production rate is 0.24 +/- 0.12 M_{sun} per SN. If
1/2 of L_{ir} comes from AGN emission, the rate is 0.48 +/- 0.24 M_{sun} per
SN. We discuss the evolutionary link of SST J1604+4304 to other galaxy
populations in terms of the stellar masses and the galactic winds.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The Hubble Space Telescope Cluster Supernova Survey: VI. The Volumetric Type Ia Supernova Rate
We present a measurement of the volumetric Type Ia supernova (SN Ia) rate out
to z ~ 1.6 from the Hubble Space Telescope Cluster Supernova Survey. In
observations spanning 189 orbits with the Advanced Camera for Surveys we
discovered 29 SNe, of which approximately 20 are SNe Ia. Twelve of these SNe Ia
are located in the foregrounds and backgrounds of the clusters targeted in the
survey. Using these new data, we derive the volumetric SN Ia rate in four broad
redshift bins, finding results consistent with previous measurements at z > 1
and strengthening the case for a SN Ia rate that is equal to or greater than
~0.6 x 10^-4/yr/Mpc^3 at z ~ 1 and flattening out at higher redshift. We
provide SN candidates and efficiency calculations in a form that makes it easy
to rebin and combine these results with other measurements for increased
statistics. Finally, we compare the assumptions about host-galaxy dust
extinction used in different high-redshift rate measurements, finding that
different assumptions may induce significant systematic differences between
measurements.Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures. Submitted to the Astrophysical Journal. Revised
version following referee comments. See the HST Cluster SN Survey website at
http://supernova.lbl.gov/2009ClusterSurvey for control time simulations in a
machine-readable table and a complete listing of transient candidates from
the surve
The Hubble Space Telescope Cluster Supernova Survey: V. Improving the Dark Energy Constraints Above z>1 and Building an Early-Type-Hosted Supernova Sample
We present ACS, NICMOS, and Keck AO-assisted photometry of 20 Type Ia
supernovae SNe Ia from the HST Cluster Supernova Survey. The SNe Ia were
discovered over the redshift interval 0.623 < z < 1.415. Fourteen of these SNe
Ia pass our strict selection cuts and are used in combination with the world's
sample of SNe Ia to derive the best current constraints on dark energy. Ten of
our new SNe Ia are beyond redshift , thereby nearly doubling the
statistical weight of HST-discovered SNe Ia beyond this redshift. Our detailed
analysis corrects for the recently identified correlation between SN Ia
luminosity and host galaxy mass and corrects the NICMOS zeropoint at the count
rates appropriate for very distant SNe Ia. Adding these supernovae improves the
best combined constraint on the dark energy density \rho_{DE}(z) at redshifts
1.0 < z < 1.6 by 18% (including systematic errors). For a LambdaCDM universe,
we find \Omega_\Lambda = 0.724 +0.015/-0.016 (68% CL including systematic
errors). For a flat wCDM model, we measure a constant dark energy
equation-of-state parameter w = -0.985 +0.071/-0.077 (68% CL). Curvature is
constrained to ~0.7% in the owCDM model and to ~2% in a model in which dark
energy is allowed to vary with parameters w_0 and w_a. Tightening further the
constraints on the time evolution of dark energy will require several
improvements, including high-quality multi-passband photometry of a sample of
several dozen z>1 SNe Ia. We describe how such a sample could be efficiently
obtained by targeting cluster fields with WFC3 on HST.Comment: 27 pages, 11 figures. Submitted to ApJ. This first posting includes
updates in response to comments from the referee. See
http://www.supernova.lbl.gov for other papers in the series pertaining to the
HST Cluster SN Survey. The updated supernova Union2.1 compilation of 580 SNe
is available at http://supernova.lbl.gov/Unio
- …
