48 research outputs found
Pulsar scattering in space and time
We report on a recent global VLBI experiment in which we study the scatter
broadening of pulsars in the spatial and time domain simultaneously. Depending
on the distribution of scattering screen(s), geometry predicts that the less
spatially broadened parts of the signal arrive earlier than the more broadened
parts. This means that over one pulse period the size of the scattering disk
should grow from pointlike to the maximum size. An equivalent description is
that the pulse profile shows less temporal broadening on the longer baselines.
This contribution presents first results that are consistent with the expected
expanding rings. We also briefly discuss how the autocorrelations can be used
for amplitude calibration. This requires a thorough investigation of the
digitisation and the sampler statistics and is not fully solved yet.Comment: 6 pages. Talk presented at the 11th European VLBI Network Symposium
(Bordeaux, France, 9-12 October 2012), PoS(11th EVN Symposium)04
Degeneracies and scaling relations in general power-law models for gravitational lenses
The time delay in gravitational lenses can be used to derive the Hubble
constant in a relatively simple way. The results of this method are less
dependent on astrophysical assumptions than in many other methods. The most
important uncertainty is related to the mass model used. We discuss a family of
models with a separable radial power-law and an arbitrary angular dependence
for the potential psi = r^beta * F(theta). Isothermal potentials are a special
case of these models with beta=1. An additional external shear is used to take
into account perturbations from other galaxies. Using a simple linear formalism
for quadruple lenses, we can derive H0 as a function of the observables and the
shear. If the latter is fixed, the result depends on the assumed power-law
exponent according to H0 proportional to (2-beta)/beta. The effect of external
shear is quantified by introducing a `critical shear' gamma_c as a measure for
the amount of shear that changes the result significantly. The analysis shows,
that in the general case H0 and gamma_c do not depend on the position of the
lens galaxy. We discuss these results and compare with numerical models for a
number of real lens systems.Comment: accepted for publication in MNRAS, 10 pages, 4 figures (eps
included), uses mn2e.cls, amsmath.sty, times.st
Direct model fitting to combine dithered ACS images
The information lost in images of undersampled CCD cameras can be recovered
with the technique of `dithering'. A number of subexposures is taken with
sub-pixel shifts in order to record structures on scales smaller than a pixel.
The standard method to combine such exposures, `Drizzle', averages after
reversing the displacements, including rotations and distortions. More
sophisticated methods are available to produce, e.g., Nyquist sampled
representations of band-limited inputs. While the combined images produced by
these methods can be of high quality, their use as input for forward-modelling
techniques in gravitational lensing is still not optimal, because the residual
artefacts still affect the modelling results in unpredictable ways. In this
paper we argue for an overall modelling approach that takes into account the
dithering and the lensing without the intermediate product of a combined image.
As one building block we introduce an alternative approach to combine dithered
images by direct model fitting with a least-squares approach including a
regularization constraint. We present tests with simulated and real data that
show the quality of the results. The additional effects of gravitational
lensing and the convolution with an instrumental point spread function can be
included in a natural way, avoiding the possible systematic errors of previous
procedures.Comment: 6 pages, 8 figure
Intensity interferometry with more than two detectors?
The original intensity interferometers were instruments built in the 1950s
and 60s by Hanbury Brown and collaborators, achieving milli-arcsec resolutions
in visible light without optical-quality mirrors. They exploited a then-novel
physical effect, now known as HBT correlation after the experiments of Hanbury
Brown and Twiss, and nowadays considered fundamental in quantum optics. Now a
new generation of inten- sity interferometers is being designed, raising the
possibility of measuring intensity correlations with three or more detectors.
Quantum optics predicts some interesting features in higher-order HBT. One is
that HBT correlation increases combinatorially with the number of detectors.
Signal to noise considerations suggest, that many-detector HBT correlations
would be mea- surable for bright masers, but very difficult for thermal
sources. But the more modest three-detector HBT correlation seems measurable
for bright stars, and would provide image information (namely the bispectrum)
not present in standard HBT.Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRA