18 research outputs found
CMB Telescopes and Optical Systems
The cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB) is now firmly established as
a fundamental and essential probe of the geometry, constituents, and birth of
the Universe. The CMB is a potent observable because it can be measured with
precision and accuracy. Just as importantly, theoretical models of the Universe
can predict the characteristics of the CMB to high accuracy, and those
predictions can be directly compared to observations. There are multiple
aspects associated with making a precise measurement. In this review, we focus
on optical components for the instrumentation used to measure the CMB
polarization and temperature anisotropy. We begin with an overview of general
considerations for CMB observations and discuss common concepts used in the
community. We next consider a variety of alternatives available for a designer
of a CMB telescope. Our discussion is guided by the ground and balloon-based
instruments that have been implemented over the years. In the same vein, we
compare the arc-minute resolution Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT) and the
South Pole Telescope (SPT). CMB interferometers are presented briefly. We
conclude with a comparison of the four CMB satellites, Relikt, COBE, WMAP, and
Planck, to demonstrate a remarkable evolution in design, sensitivity,
resolution, and complexity over the past thirty years.Comment: To appear in: Planets, Stars and Stellar Systems (PSSS), Volume 1:
Telescopes and Instrumentatio
Pulsating White Dwarf Stars and Precision Asteroseismology
Galactic history is written in the white dwarf stars. Their surface
properties hint at interiors composed of matter under extreme conditions. In
the forty years since their discovery, pulsating white dwarf stars have moved
from side-show curiosities to center stage as important tools for unraveling
the deep mysteries of the Universe. Innovative observational techniques and
theoretical modeling tools have breathed life into precision asteroseismology.
We are just learning to use this powerful tool, confronting theoretical models
with observed frequencies and their time rate-of-change. With this tool, we
calibrate white dwarf cosmochronology; we explore equations of state; we
measure stellar masses, rotation rates, and nuclear reaction rates; we explore
the physics of interior crystallization; we study the structure of the
progenitors of Type Ia supernovae, and we test models of dark matter. The white
dwarf pulsations are at once the heartbeat of galactic history and a window
into unexplored and exotic physics.Comment: 70 pages, 11 figures, to be published in Annual Review of Astronomy
and Astrophysics 200
Shedding Light on the Galaxy Luminosity Function
From as early as the 1930s, astronomers have tried to quantify the
statistical nature of the evolution and large-scale structure of galaxies by
studying their luminosity distribution as a function of redshift - known as the
galaxy luminosity function (LF). Accurately constructing the LF remains a
popular and yet tricky pursuit in modern observational cosmology where the
presence of observational selection effects due to e.g. detection thresholds in
apparent magnitude, colour, surface brightness or some combination thereof can
render any given galaxy survey incomplete and thus introduce bias into the LF.
Over the last seventy years there have been numerous sophisticated
statistical approaches devised to tackle these issues; all have advantages --
but not one is perfect. This review takes a broad historical look at the key
statistical tools that have been developed over this period, discussing their
relative merits and highlighting any significant extensions and modifications.
In addition, the more generalised methods that have emerged within the last few
years are examined. These methods propose a more rigorous statistical framework
within which to determine the LF compared to some of the more traditional
methods. I also look at how photometric redshift estimations are being
incorporated into the LF methodology as well as considering the construction of
bivariate LFs. Finally, I review the ongoing development of completeness
estimators which test some of the fundamental assumptions going into LF
estimators and can be powerful probes of any residual systematic effects
inherent magnitude-redshift data.Comment: 95 pages, 23 figures, 3 tables. Now published in The Astronomy &
Astrophysics Review. This version: bring in line with A&AR format
requirements, also minor typo corrections made, additional citations and
higher rez images adde
Anosmia and COVID-19: perspectives on its association and the pathophysiological mechanisms involved
The large-scale structure of the Universe
Research over the past 25 years has led to the view that the rich tapestry of
present-day cosmic structure arose during the first instants of creation, where
weak ripples were imposed on the otherwise uniform and rapidly expanding
primordial soup. Over 14 billion years of evolution, these ripples have been
amplified to enormous proportions by gravitational forces, producing
ever-growing concentrations of dark matter in which ordinary gases cool,
condense and fragment to make galaxies. This process can be faithfully mimicked
in large computer simulations, and tested by a variety of observations that
probe the history of the Universe starting from just 400,000 yr after the Big
Bang.Comment: Invited review to Nature (27 April 2006 issue), Early Universe
Supplement, 34 pages, 6 figures (partially size reduced