1,756 research outputs found
Detection of large scale intrinsic ellipticity-density correlation from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey and implications for weak lensing surveys
The power spectrum of weak lensing shear caused by large-scale structure is
an emerging tool for precision cosmology, in particular for measuring the
effects of dark energy on the growth of structure at low redshift. One
potential source of systematic error is intrinsic alignments of ellipticities
of neighbouring galaxies (II correlation) that could mimic the correlations due
to lensing. A related possibility pointed out by Hirata and Seljak (2004) is
correlation between the intrinsic ellipticities of galaxies and the density
field responsible for gravitational lensing shear (GI correlation). We present
constraints on both the II and GI correlations using 265 908 spectroscopic
galaxies from the SDSS, and using galaxies as tracers of the mass in the case
of the GI analysis. The availability of redshifts in the SDSS allows us to
select galaxies at small radial separations, which both reduces noise in the
intrinsic alignment measurement and suppresses galaxy- galaxy lensing (which
otherwise swamps the GI correlation). While we find no detection of the II
correlation, our results are nonetheless statistically consistent with recent
detections found using the SuperCOSMOS survey. In contrast, we have a clear
detection of GI correlation in galaxies brighter than L* that persists to the
largest scales probed (60 Mpc/h) and with a sign predicted by theoretical
models. This correlation could cause the existing lensing surveys at z~1 to
underestimate the linear amplitude of fluctuations by as much as 20% depending
on the source sample used, while for surveys at z~0.5 the underestimation may
reach 30%. (Abridged.)Comment: 16 pages, matches version published in MNRAS (only minor changes in
presentation from original version
Galaxy-Galaxy Lensing by Non-Spherical Haloes I:Theoretical Considerations
We use Monte Carlo simulations to investigate the theory of galaxy-galaxy
lensing by non-spherical dark matter haloes. The simulations include a careful
accounting of the effects of multiple deflections. In a typical data set where
the mean tangential shear of sources with redshifts zs ~ 0.6 is measured with
respect to the observed symmetry axes of foreground galaxies with redshifts zl
~ 0.3, the signature of anisotropic galaxy-galaxy lensing differs substantially
from the expectation that one would have in the absence of multiple
deflections. The observed ratio of the mean tangential shears, g+/g-, is
strongly suppressed compared to the function that one would measure if the
intrinsic symmetry axes of the foreground galaxies were known. Depending upon
the characteristic masses of the lenses, the observed ratio of the mean
tangential shears may be consistent with an isotropic signal (despite the fact
that the lenses are non-spherical), or it may even be reversed from the
expected signal (i.e., the mean tangential shear for sources close to the
observed minor axes of the lenses may exceed the mean tangential shear for
sources close to the observed major axes of the lenses). These effects are
caused primarily by the fact that the lens galaxies have, themselves, been
lensed and therefore the observed symmetry axes of the lenses differ from their
intrinsic symmetry axes. The effects of lensing of the foreground galaxies on
the observed function g+/g- cannot be eliminated by the rejection of foreground
galaxies with small image ellipticities, nor by focusing the analysis on
sources that are located very close to the observed symmetry axes of the
foreground galaxies. We conclude that any attempt to use a measurement of g+/g-
to constrain the shapes of dark matter galaxy haloes must include Monte Carlo
simulations that take multiple deflections properly into account.Comment: 15 pages, 17 figures, submitted to MNRAS, full manuscript with
high-resolution version of Fig. 4 can be found at
http://firedrake.bu.edu/preprints/preprints.htm
Ring-type singular solutions of the biharmonic nonlinear Schrodinger equation
We present new singular solutions of the biharmonic nonlinear Schrodinger
equation in dimension d and nonlinearity exponent 2\sigma+1. These solutions
collapse with the quasi self-similar ring profile, with ring width L(t) that
vanishes at singularity, and radius proportional to L^\alpha, where
\alpha=(4-\sigma)/(\sigma(d-1)). The blowup rate of these solutions is
1/(3+\alpha) for 4/d\le\sigma<4, and slightly faster than 1/4 for \sigma=4.
These solutions are analogous to the ring-type solutions of the nonlinear
Schrodinger equation.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, research articl
Mapping the allowed parameter space for decaying dark matter models
I consider constraints on a phenomenological decaying-dark-matter model, in
which two weakly-interacting massive particle (WIMP) species have a small mass
splitting, and in which the heavier particle decays to the lighter particle and
a massless particle on cosmological timescales. The decay parameter space is
parameterized by , the speed of the lighter particle in the center-of-mass
frame of the heavier particle prior to decay, and the decay time . Since
I consider the case in which dark-matter halos have formed before there has
been significant decay, I focus on the effects of decay in already-formed
halos. I show that the parameter space may be constrained by
observed properties of dark-matter halos. I highlight which set of observations
is likely to yield the cleanest constraints on parameter space, and
calculate the constraints in those cases in which the effect of decay on the
observables can be calculated without N-body simulations of decaying dark
matter. I show that for km s, the z=0 galaxy
cluster mass function and halo mass-concentration relation constrain 40 Gyr, and that precise constraints on for smaller will
require N-body simulations.Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures, references added, replaced to match version
published in Phys. Rev.
The Masses and Shapes of Dark Matter Halos from Galaxy-Galaxy Lensing in the CFHTLS
We present the first galaxy-galaxy weak lensing results using early data from
the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Legacy Survey (CFHTLS). These results are
based on ~22 sq. deg. of i' data. From this data, we estimate the average
velocity dispersion for an L* galaxy at a redshift of 0.3 to be 137 +- 11 km/s,
with a virial mass, M_{200}, of 1.1 +- 0.2 \times 10^{12} h^{-1} Msun and a
rest frame R-band mass-to-light ratio of 173 +- 34 h Msun/Lsun. We also
investigate various possible sources of systematic error in detail.
Additionally, we separate our lens sample into two sub-samples, divided by
apparent magnitude, thus average redshift. From this early data we do not
detect significant evolution in galaxy dark matter halo mass-to-light ratios
from a redshift of 0.45 to 0.27. Finally, we test for non-spherical galaxy dark
matter halos. Our results favor a dark matter halo with an ellipticity of ~0.3
at the 2-sigma level when averaged over all galaxies. If the sample of
foreground lens galaxies is selected to favor ellipticals, the mean halo
ellipticity and significance of this result increase.Comment: 12 pages, 11 figures, accepted to ApJ, uses emulateap
Fluid Models of Many-server Queues with Abandonment
We study many-server queues with abandonment in which customers have general
service and patience time distributions. The dynamics of the system are modeled
using measure- valued processes, to keep track of the residual service and
patience times of each customer. Deterministic fluid models are established to
provide first-order approximation for this model. The fluid model solution,
which is proved to uniquely exists, serves as the fluid limit of the
many-server queue, as the number of servers becomes large. Based on the fluid
model solution, first-order approximations for various performance quantities
are proposed
The Weak Lensing Signal and the Clustering of BOSS Galaxies I: Measurements
A joint analysis of the clustering of galaxies and their weak gravitational
lensing signal is well-suited to simultaneously constrain the galaxy-halo
connection as well as the cosmological parameters by breaking the degeneracy
between galaxy bias and the amplitude of clustering signal. In a series of two
papers, we perform such an analysis at the highest redshift () in
the literature using CMASS galaxies in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-III Baryon
Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey Eleventh Data Release (SDSS-III/BOSS DR11)
catalog spanning 8300~deg. In this paper, we present details of the
clustering and weak lensing measurements of these galaxies. We define a
subsample of 400,916 CMASS galaxies based on their redshifts and stellar mass
estimates so that the galaxies constitute an approximately volume-limited and
similar population over the redshift range . We obtain a
signal-to-noise ratio for the galaxy clustering measurement. We
also explore the redshift and stellar mass dependence of the clustering signal.
For the weak lensing measurement, we use existing deeper imaging data from the
CFHTLS with publicly available shape and photometric redshift catalogs from
CFHTLenS, but only in a 105~deg area which overlaps with BOSS. This
restricts the lensing measurement to only 5,084 CMASS galaxies. After careful
systematic tests, we find a highly significant detection of the CMASS weak
lensing signal, with total . These measurements form the basis of
the halo occupation distribution and cosmology analysis presented in More et
al. (Paper II).Comment: 15 pages, 13 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical
Journa
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Evaluation of 4 Outcomes Measures in Microtia Treatment: Exposures, Infections, Aesthetics, and Psychosocial Ramifications.
BackgroundIn craniofacial microsomia, microtia and canal atresia pose formidable reconstructive challenges. We review our institutional experience in treating microtia and atresia to identify variables associated with 4 outcomes measures: complications, surgical revisions, aesthetic outcomes, and psychosocial function.MethodsCraniofacial microsomia patients treated at the University of California Los Angeles Craniofacial Clinic between 2008 and 2014 greater than 13 years of age (n = 68) were reviewed for microtia and atresia treatment and outcomes.ResultsIn total, 91.2% of patients diagnosed with craniofacial microsomia presented with microtia, affecting 75 ears. Both a male and right-sided predominance were observed. Fifty-six patients (90.3%) underwent autologous external ear reconstruction at an average age of 8.5 years. Age, type of incision, and size of cartilage framework did not predict total number of surgeries or complications. Severity of ear anomalies correlated with increased number of surgeries (P < 0.001) and decreased aesthetic outcomes (P < 0.001) but not complications. In total, 87.1% of patients with microtia had documented hearing loss, of which the majority were conductive and 18.5% were mixed sensorineural and conductive. Hearing deficits were addressed in 70.4% of patients with external hearing aids, bone anchored hearing aids, or canaloplasty. Of all variables, improvement of psychosocial function was correlated only to hearing loss treatment of any type (P = 0.01).ConclusionsOn evaluation of surgical and patient characteristics, severity of microtia predicted the total number of surgical revisions performed and aesthetic ratings. In addition, we found that the only factor that correlated with improved patient and parent-reported psychosocial outcomes was treatment of hearing loss
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