59 research outputs found
The High-Mass End of the Red Sequence at z~0.55 from SDSS-III/BOSS: completeness, bimodality and luminosity function
We have developed an analytical method based on forward-modeling techniques
to characterize the high-mass end of the red sequence (RS) galaxy population at
redshift , from the DR10 BOSS CMASS spectroscopic sample, which
comprises galaxies. The method, which follows an unbinned maximum
likelihood approach, allows the deconvolution of the intrinsic CMASS
colour-colour-magnitude distributions from photometric errors and selection
effects. This procedure requires modeling the covariance matrix for the i-band
magnitude, g-r colour and r-i colour using Stripe 82 multi-epoch data. Our
results indicate that the error-deconvolved intrinsic RS distribution is
consistent, within the photometric uncertainties, with a single point
() in the colour-colour plane at fixed magnitude, for a
narrow redshift slice. We have computed the high-mass end () of the -band RS Luminosity Function (RS LF) in several redshift
slices within the redshift range . In this narrow redshift range,
the evolution of the RS LF is consistent, within the uncertainties in the
modeling, with a passively-evolving model with Mpc mag, fading at a rate of mag per
unit redshift. We report RS completeness as a function of magnitude and
redshift in the CMASS sample, which will facilitate a variety of
galaxy-evolution and clustering studies using BOSS. Our forward-modeling method
lays the foundations for future studies using other dark-energy surveys like
eBOSS or DESI, which are affected by the same type of photometric
blurring/selection effects.Comment: 27 pages, 20 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
The clustering of galaxies in the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey: modelling the clustering and halo occupation distribution of BOSS CMASS galaxies in the Final Data Release
Citation: Rodriguez-Torres, S. A., Chuang, C. H., Prada, F., Guo, H., Klypin, A., Behroozi, P., . . . Thomas, D. (2016). The clustering of galaxies in the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey: modelling the clustering and halo occupation distribution of BOSS CMASS galaxies in the Final Data Release. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 460(2), 1173-1187. doi:10.1093/mnras/stw1014We present a study of the clustering and halo occupation distribution of Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) CMASS galaxies in the redshift range 0.43 cold dark matter Planck cosmology. We compare the observational data with the simulated ones on a light cone constructed from 20 subsequent outputs of the simulation. Observational effects such as incompleteness, geometry, veto masks and fibre collisions are included in the model, which reproduces within 1 sigma errors the observed monopole of the two-point correlation function at all relevant scales: from the smallest scales, 0.5 h(-1) Mpc, up to scales beyond the baryon acoustic oscillation feature. This model also agrees remarkably well with the BOSS galaxy power spectrum (up to k similar to 1 h Mpc(-1)), and the three-point correlation function. The quadrupole of the correlation function presents some tensions with observations. We discuss possible causes that can explain this disagreement, including target selection effects. Overall, the standard HAM model describes remarkably well the clustering statistics of the CMASS sample. We compare the stellar-to-halo mass relation for the CMASS sample measured using weak lensing in the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Stripe 82 Survey with the prediction of our clustering model, and find a good agreement within 1 sigma. The BigMD-BOSS light cone including properties of BOSS galaxies and halo properties is made publicly available
SkyPy: A package for modelling the Universe
SkyPy is an open-source Python package for simulating the astrophysical sky. It comprises
a library of physical and empirical models across a range of observables and a command line
script to run end-to-end simulations. The library provides functions that sample realisations
of sources and their associated properties from probability distributions. Simulation pipelines
are constructed from these models using a YAML-based configuration syntax, while task
scheduling and data dependencies are handled internally and the modular design allows users
to interface with external software. SkyPy is developed and maintained by a diverse community
of domain experts with a focus on software sustainability and interoperability. By fostering
co-development, it provides a framework for correlated simulations of a range of cosmological
probes including galaxy populations, large scale structure, the cosmic microwave background,
supernovae and gravitational waves.
Version 0.4 implements functions that model various properties of galaxies including luminosity functions, redshift distributions and optical photometry from spectral energy distribution
templates. Future releases will provide additional modules, for example to simulate populations of dark matter halos and model the galaxy-halo connection, making use of existing
software packages from the astrophysics community where appropriate
The clustering of galaxies at z~0.5 in the SDSS-III Data Release 9 BOSS-CMASS sample: a test for the LCDM cosmology
We present results on the clustering of 282,068 galaxies in the Baryon
Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) sample of massive galaxies with
redshifts 0.4<z<0.7 which is part of the Sloan Digital Sky Survey III project.
Our results cover a large range of scales from ~0.5 to ~90 Mpc/h. We compare
these estimates with the expectations of the flat LCDM cosmological model with
parameters compatible with WMAP7 data. We use the MultiDark cosmological
simulation together with a simple halo abundance matching technique, to
estimate galaxy correlation functions, power spectra, abundance of subhaloes
and galaxy biases. We find that the LCDM model gives a reasonable description
to the observed correlation functions at z~0.5, which is a remarkably good
agreement considering that the model, once matched to the observed abundance of
BOSS galaxies, does not have any free parameters. However, we find a deviation
(>~10%) in the correlation functions for scales less than ~1 Mpc/h and ~10-40
Mpc/h. A more realistic abundance matching model and better statistics from
upcoming observations are needed to clarify the situation. We also estimate
that about 12% of the "galaxies" in the abundance-matched sample are satellites
inhabiting central haloes with mass M>~1e14 M_sun/h. Using the MultiDark
simulation we also study the real space halo bias b(r) of the matched catalogue
finding that b=2.00+/-0.07 at large scales, consistent with the one obtained
using the measured BOSS projected correlation function. Furthermore, the linear
large-scale bias depends on the number density n of the abundance-matched
sample as b=-0.048-(0.594+/-0.02)*log(n/(h/Mpc)^3). Extrapolating these results
to BAO scales we measure a scale-dependent damping of the acoustic signal
produced by non-linear evolution that leads to ~2-4% dips at ~3 sigma level for
wavenumbers k>~0.1 h/Mpc in the linear large-scale bias.Comment: Replaced to match published version. Typos corrected; 25 pages, 17
figures, 9 tables. To appear in MNRAS. Correlation functions (projected and
redshift-space) and correlation matrices of CMASS presented in Appendix B.
Correlation and covariance data for the combined CMASS sample can be
downloaded from http://www.sdss3.org/science/boss_publications.ph
Scenario Planning and Nanotechnological Futures
Scenario planning may assist us in harnessing the benefits of nanotechnology
and managing the associated risks for the good of the society. Scenario
planning is a way to describe the present state of the world and develop
several hypotheses about the future of the world, thereby enabling discussions
about how the world ought to be. Scenario planning thus is not only a tool for
learning and foresight, but also for leadership. Informed decision-making by
experts and political leaders becomes possible, while simultaneously allaying
public's perception of the risks of new and emerging technologies such as
nanotechnology. Two scenarios of the societal impact of nanotechnology are the
mixed-signals scenario and the confluence scenario. Technoscientists have major
roles to play in both scenarios
SDSS-IV eBOSS emission-line galaxy pilot survey
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey IV extended Baryonic Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (SDSS-IV/eBOSS) will observe 195 000 emission-line galaxies (ELGs) to measure the baryonic acoustic oscillation (BAO) standard ruler at redshift 0.9. To test different ELG selection algorithms, 9000 spectra were observed with the SDSS spectrograph as a pilot survey based on data from several imaging surveys. First, using visual inspection and redshift quality flags, we show that the automated spectroscopic redshifts assigned by the pipeline meet the quality requirements for a reliable BAO measurement. We also show the correlations between sky emission, signal-to-noise ratio in the emission lines, and redshift error. Then we provide a detailed description of each target selection algorithm we tested and compare them with the requirements of the eBOSS experiment. As a result, we provide reliable redshift distributions for the different target selection schemes we tested. Finally, we determine an target selection algorithms that is best suited to be applied on DECam photometry because they fulfill the eBOSS survey efficiency requirements
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The tenth data release of the Sloan digital sky survey: First spectroscopic data from the SDSS-iii apache point observatory galactic evolution experiment
The Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) has been in operation since 2000 April. This paper presents the tenth public data release (DR10) from its current incarnation, SDSS-III. This data release includes the first spectroscopic data from the Apache Point Observatory Galaxy Evolution Experiment (APOGEE), along with spectroscopic data from the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) taken through 2012 July. The APOGEE instrument is a near-infrared R ~ 22,500 300-fiber spectrograph covering 1:514-1:696 μm. The APOGEE survey is studying the chemical abundances and radial velocities of roughly 100,000 red giant star candidates in the bulge, bar, disk, and halo of the Milky Way. DR10 includes 178,397 spectra of 57,454 stars, each typically observed three or more times, from APOGEE. Derived quantities from these spectra (radial velocities, effective temperatures, surface gravities, and metallicities) are also included.
DR10 also roughly doubles the number of BOSS spectra over those included in the ninth data release. DR10 includes a total of 1,507,954 BOSS spectra, comprising 927,844 galaxy spectra; 182,009 quasar spectra; and 159,327 stellar spectra, selected over 6373.2 deg2.This is an author-created, un-copyedited version of an article accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series. The publisher is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript or any version derived from it. The Version of Record is available online at http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/0067-0049/211/2/17. The accepted version will be under embargo until the 18th March 2015
J-PLUS: The javalambre photometric local universe survey
ABSTRACT: TheJavalambrePhotometric Local UniverseSurvey (J-PLUS )isanongoing 12-band photometricopticalsurvey, observingthousands of squaredegrees of theNorthernHemispherefromthededicated JAST/T80 telescope at the Observatorio AstrofÃsico de Javalambre (OAJ). The T80Cam is a camera with a field of view of 2 deg2 mountedon a telescopewith a diameter of 83 cm, and isequippedwith a uniquesystem of filtersspanningtheentireopticalrange (3500–10 000 Ã…). Thisfiltersystemis a combination of broad-, medium-, and narrow-band filters, optimallydesigned to extracttherest-framespectralfeatures (the 3700–4000 Ã… Balmer break region, Hδ, Ca H+K, the G band, and the Mg b and Ca triplets) that are key to characterizingstellartypes and delivering a low-resolutionphotospectrumforeach pixel of theobservedsky. With a typicaldepth of AB ∼21.25 mag per band, thisfilter set thusallowsforanunbiased and accuratecharacterization of thestellarpopulation in our Galaxy, itprovidesanunprecedented 2D photospectralinformationforall resolved galaxies in the local Universe, as well as accuratephoto-z estimates (at the δ z/(1 + z)∼0.005–0.03 precisionlevel) formoderatelybright (up to r ∼ 20 mag) extragalacticsources. Whilesomenarrow-band filters are designedforthestudy of particular emissionfeatures ([O II]/λ3727, Hα/λ6563) up to z < 0.017, theyalsoprovidewell-definedwindowsfortheanalysis of otheremissionlines at higherredshifts. As a result, J-PLUS has thepotential to contribute to a widerange of fields in Astrophysics, both in thenearbyUniverse (MilkyWaystructure, globular clusters, 2D IFU-likestudies, stellarpopulations of nearby and moderate-redshiftgalaxies, clusters of galaxies) and at highredshifts (emission-line galaxies at z ≈ 0.77, 2.2, and 4.4, quasi-stellarobjects, etc.). Withthispaper, wereleasethefirst∼1000 deg2 of J-PLUS data, containingabout 4.3 millionstars and 3.0 milliongalaxies at r <  21mag. With a goal of 8500 deg2 forthe total J-PLUS footprint, thesenumbers are expected to rise to about 35 millionstars and 24 milliongalaxiesbytheend of thesurvey.Funding for the J-PLUS Project has been provided by the Governments of Spain and Aragón through the Fondo de Inversiones de Teruel, the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO; under grants AYA2017-86274-P, AYA2016-77846-P, AYA2016-77237-C3-1-P, AYA2015-66211-C2-1-P, AYA2015-66211-C2-2, AYA2012-30789, AGAUR grant SGR-661/2017, and ICTS-2009-14), and European FEDER funding (FCDD10-4E-867, FCDD13-4E-2685
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