2,282 research outputs found
Effects of overlapping sources on cosmic shear estimation: Statistical sensitivity and pixel-noise bias
In Stage-IV imaging surveys, a significant amount of the cosmologically
useful information is due to sources whose images overlap with those of other
sources on the sky. The cosmic shear signal is primarily encoded in the
estimated shapes of observed galaxies and thus directly impacted by overlaps.
We introduce a framework based on the Fisher formalism to analyze effects of
overlapping sources (blending) on the estimation of cosmic shear. For the Rubin
Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), we present the expected
loss in statistical sensitivity for the ten-year survey due to blending. We
find that for approximately 62% of galaxies that are likely to be detected in
full-depth LSST images, at least 1% of the flux in their pixels is from
overlapping sources. We also find that the statistical correlations between
measures of overlapping galaxies and, to a much lesser extent the higher shot
noise level due to their presence, decrease the effective number density of
galaxies, , by 18%. We calculate an upper limit on of
39.4 galaxies per arcmin in band. We study the impact of varying
stellar density on and illustrate the diminishing returns of
extending the survey into lower Galactic latitudes. We extend the Fisher
formalism to predict the increase in pixel-noise bias due to blending for
maximum-likelihood (ML) shape estimators. We find that noise bias is sensitive
to the particular shape estimator and measure of ensemble-average shape that is
used, and properties of the galaxy that include redshift-dependent quantities
such as size and luminosity.Comment: Accepted for publication in JCAP. 45 pages, 19 figure
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Online monitoring of dispersion functions and transfer matrices at the SLC
The symmetries of the chromatic correction sections in the SLC Final Focus System allow a high-resolution determination of the pulse-to-pulse energy fluctuations by exploiting the information from beam position monitors (BPMs) in regions of large dispersion. By correlating this signal with other BPMs, one can infer the dispersion function as well as spatial components of transfer matrices anywhere in the arcs and the Final Focus System without interrupting normal machine operation. We present results from data recorded during either periods of stable operation or periods when the linac energy was intentionally varied. 6 refs., 7 figs
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New drift chamber for the Mark II detector at the SLAC Linear Collider
The design of the new cylindrical drift chamber for the Mark II detector at the SLAC Linear Collider is described. Prototype tests to determine the working parameters of the chamber and to study possible gas mixtures are discussed
Measurement of the Ds Lifetime
We report the results of a precise measurement of the Ds meson lifetime based
on 1662 +/- 56 fully reconstructed Ds -> phi pi decays, from the charm
hadroproduction experiment E791 at Fermilab. Using an unbinned maximum
likelihood fit, we measure the Ds lifetime to be 0.518 +/- 0.014 +/- 0.007 ps.
The ratio of the measured Ds lifetime to the world average D0 lifetime is 1.25
+/- 0.04. This result differs from unity by six standard deviations, indicating
significantly different lifetimes for the Ds and the D0.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, 2 table. LaTe
Search for the Flavor-Changing Neutral-Current Decays and
We report the results of a search for the flavor-changing neutral-current
decays and in
data from Fermilab charm hadroproduction experiment E791. No signal above
background is found, and we obtain upper limits on branching fractions,
and
, at the 90\% confidence
level.Comment: nine pages with figures; compressed, uuencoded postscrip
Fermilab E791
Fermilab E791, a very high statistics charm particle experiment, recently
completed its data taking at Fermilab's Tagged Photon Laboratory. Over 20
billion events were recorded through a loose transverse energy trigger and
written to 8mm tape in the the 1991-92 fixed target run at Fermilab. This
unprecedented data sample containing charm is being analysed on many-thousand
MIP RISC computing farms set up at sites in the collaboration. A glimpse of the
data taking and analysis effort is presented. We also show some preliminary
results for common charm decay modes. Our present analysis indicates a very
rich yield of over 200K reconstructed charm decays.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, LaTe
Study of the decay and measurement of masses and widths
From a sample of 848 44 decays, we find
. Using a Dalitz plot analysis of this
three body decay, we find significant contributions from the channels
, , , , and
. We present also the values obtained for masses and widths of
the resonances and .Comment: 10 pages, 3 eps figure
Direct measurement of the pion valence quark momentum distribution, the pion light-cone wave function squared
We present the first direct measurements of the pion valence quark momentum
distribution which is related to the square of the pion light-cone wave
function. The measurements were carried out using data on diffractive
dissociation of 500 GeV/c into di-jets from a platinum target at
Fermilab experiment E791. The results show that the light-cone
asymptotic wave function, which was developed using perturbative QCD methods,
describes the data well for or more. We also
measured the transverse momentum distribution of the diffractive di-jets.Comment: 13 pages, 4 figure
Experimental evidence for a light and broad scalar resonance in decay
From a sample of decay, we find
. Using a coherent amplitude analysis
to fit the Dalitz plot of this decays, we find strong evidence that a scalar
resonance of mass MeV/ and width MeV/ accounts for approximately half of all decays.Comment: 10 pages, 3 eps figure
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