50 research outputs found
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Simulating the effects of intergalactic gray dust
Using a high-resolution cosmological hydrodynamic simulation, we present a method to constrain extinction due to intergalactic gray dust based on the observed magnitudes of distant Type Ia supernovae. We apply several simple prescriptions to relate the intergalactic dust density to the gas density in the simulation, thereby obtaining dust extinctions that may be directly compared with the observed distribution of supernova magnitudes. Our analysis is sensitive to the spatial distribution of gray dust but is not dependent on its intrinsic properties, such as its opacity or grain size. We present an application of our technique to the supernova data of Perlmutter et al., who find that their high-redshift sample is ~0.2 mag fainter than the expectation for a nonaccelerating, low-density universe. We find that for gray dust to be responsible, it must be distributed quite smoothly (e.g., tracing intergalactic gas). More realistic dust distributions, such as dust tracing the metal density, are inconsistent with observations at the 1.5-2 Ï level. Upcoming observations and improved modeling of the dust distribution should lead to stronger constraints on intergalactic gray dust extinction
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Closing in on Omega(M): The amplitude of mass fluctuations from galaxy clusters and the Ly alpha forest
We estimate the present-day value of the matter density parameter ΩM by combining constraints from the galaxy cluster mass function with Croft et al.\u27s recent measurement of the mass power spectrum, P(k), from Lyα forest data. The key assumption of the method is that cosmic structure formed by gravitational instability from Gaussian primordial fluctuations. For a specified value of ΩM, matching the observed cluster mass function then fixes the value of Ï8, the rms amplitude of mass fluctuations in 8 h-1 Mpc spheres, and it thus determines the normalization of P(k) at z = 0. The value of ΩM also determines the ratio of P(k) at z = 0 to P(k) at z = 2.5, the central redshift of the Lyα forest data; the ratio is different for an open universe (Î = 0) or a flat universe. Because the Lyα forest measurement only reaches comoving scales 2Ï/k ~ 15-20 h-1 Mpc, the derived value of ΩM depends on the value of the power spectrum shape parameter Î, which determines the relative contribution of larger scale modes to Ï8. Adopting Î = 0.2, a value favored by galaxy clustering data, we find ΩM = 0.46+0.12-0.10 for an open universe and ΩM = 0.34+0.13-0.09 for a flat universe (1 Ï errors, not including the uncertainty in cluster normalization). Cluster-normalized models with ΩM = 1 predict too low an amplitude for P(k) at z = 2.5, while models with ΩM = 0.1 predict too high an amplitude. The more general best-fit parameter combination is ΩM + 0.2ΩΠ0.46 + 1.3(Î - 0.2), where ΩΠ⥠Î/3H20. Analysis of larger, existing samples of QSO spectra could greatly improve the measurement of P(k) from the Lyα forest, allowing a determination of ΩM by this method with a precision of ~15%, limited mainly by uncertainty in the cluster mass function
Towards machine-assisted meta-studies: the Hubble constant
We present an approach for automatic extraction of measured values from the astrophysical literature, using the Hubble constant for our pilot study. Our rules-based model â a classical technique in natural language processing â has successfully extracted 298 measurements of the Hubble constant, with uncertainties, from the 208â541 available arXiv astrophysics papers. We have also created an artificial neural network classifier to identify papers in arXiv which report novel measurements. From the analysis of our results we find that reporting measurements with uncertainties and the correct units is critical information when distinguishing novel measurements in free text. Our results correctly highlight the current tension for measurements of the Hubble constant and recover the 3.5Ï discrepancy â demonstrating that the tool presented in this paper is useful for meta-studies of astrophysical measurements from a large number of publications
Constraints on cosmological parameters from the Ly alpha forest power spectrum and COBE DMR
We combine COBE DMR measurements of cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropy with a recent measurement of the mass power spectrum at redshift z = 2.5 from Lyα forest data to derive constraints on cosmological parameters and test the inflationary cold dark matter (CDM) scenario of structure formation. By treating the inflationary spectral index n as a free parameter, we are able to find successful fits to the COBE and Lyα forest constraints in Ωm = 1 models with and without massive neutrinos and in low-Ωm models with and without a cosmological constant. Within each class of model, the combination of COBE and the Lyα forest P(k) constrains a parameter combination of the form ΩmhαnÎČΩ, with different indices for each case. This new constraint breaks some of the degeneracies in cosmological parameter determinations from other measurements of large-scale structure and CMB anisotropy. The Lyα forest P(k) provides the first measurement of the slope of the linear mass power spectrum on ~Mpc scales, Îœ = -2.25 ± 0.18, and it confirms a basic prediction of the inflationary CDM scenario: an approximately scale invariant spectrum of primeval fluctuations (n 1) modulated by a transfer function that bends P(k) toward kn-4 on small scales. Considering additional observational data, we find that COBE-normalized, Ωm = 1 models that match the Lyα forest P(k) do not match the observed masses of rich galaxy clusters, and that low-Ωm models with a cosmological constant provide the best overall fit to the available data, even without the direct evidence for cosmic acceleration from Type Ia supernovae. With our fiducial parameter choices, the flat, low-Ωm models that match COBE and the Lyα forest P(k) also match recent measurements of small-scale CMB anisotropy. Modest improvements in the Lyα forest P(k) measurement could greatly restrict the allowable region of parameter space for CDM models, constrain the contribution of tensor fluctuations to CMB anisotropy, and achieve a more stringent test of the current consensus model of structure formation
Line versus Flux Statistics -- Considerations for the Low Redshift Lyman-alpha Forest
The flux/transmission power spectrum has become a popular statistical tool in
studies of the high redshift () Lyman-alpha forest. At low redshifts,
where the forest has thinned out into a series of well-isolated absorption
lines, the motivation for flux statistics is less obvious. Here, we study the
relative merits of flux versus line correlations, and derive a simple condition
under which one is favored over the other on purely statistical grounds.
Systematic errors probably play an important role in this discussion, and they
are outlined as well.Comment: 6 pages, to appear in "The IGM/Galaxy Connection: The Distribution of
Baryons at z=0", eds. J. L. Rosenberg and M. E. Putma
On the possibility of baryon acoustic oscillation measurements at redshift z > 7.6 with the Roman space telescope
The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope (RST), with its field of view and high sensitivity will make surveys of cosmological large-scale structure possible at high redshifts. We investigate the possibility of detecting baryon acoustic oscillations (BAO) at redshifts z > 7.6 for use as a standard ruler. We use data from the hydrodynamic simulation BLUETIDES in conjunction with the gigaparsec-scale Outer Rim simulation and a model for patchy reionization to create mock RST High Latitude Survey grism data for Lymanâα emission line selected galaxies at redshifts z = 7.4 to z = 10, covering 2280âdeg2. We measure the monopoles of galaxies in the mock catalogues and fit the BAO features. We find that for a line flux of L=7Ă10â17 ergsâ1cmâ2â , the 5Ï detection limit for the current design, the BAO feature is partially detectable (measured in three out of four survey quadrants analysed independently). The resulting root mean square error on the angular diameter distance to z = 7.7 is 7.9â per centâ . If we improve the detection sensitivity by a factor of two (i.e. L=3.5Ă10â17 ergsâ1cmâ2â ), the distance error reduces to 1.4 per centâ . We caution that many more factors are yet to be modelled, including dust obscuration, the damping wing due to the intergalactic medium, and low redshift interlopers. If these issues do not strongly affect the results, or different observational techniques (such as use of multiple lines) can mitigate them, RST, or similar instruments may be able to constrain the angular diameter distance to the high redshift universe
Light Relic Neutralinos
The relic abundance and the scalar cross{section o nucleon for light neutralinos (of mass m below about 45 GeV) are evaluated in an e ective MSSM model with R-parity conservation and without GUT{inspired relations among gaugino masses. It is shown that these neutralinos may provide a sizeable contribution to the matter density in the Universe CDM. By requiring that its relic abundance does not exceed the upper bound on CDM based on the new WMAP data, a lower bound on the neutralino mass m > 6 GeV is derived. These light neutralinos can also produce measurable e ects in WIMP direct detection experiments, and in particular could explain the modulation result recently con rmed by DAMA. Uncertainties in direct detection calculations due to the modeling of the WIMP velocity distribution function are also discussed
The current status of observational cosmology
Observational cosmology has indeed made very rapid progress in recent years.
The ability to quantify the universe has largely improved due to observational
constraints coming from structure formation. The transition to precision
cosmology has been spearheaded by measurements of the anisotropy in the cosmic
microwave background (CMB) over the past decade. Observations of the large
scale structure in the distribution of galaxies, high red-shift supernova, have
provided the required complementary information. We review the current status
of cosmological parameter estimates from joint analysis of CMB anisotropy and
large scale structure (LSS) data. We also sound a note of caution on
overstating the successes achieved thus far.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures, Latex style files included, To appear in the
proceedings of ICGC-04. Minor rewording in the abstract and introductio
Cosmology with Gravitational Lensing
In these lectures I give an overview of gravitational lensing, concentrating
on theoretical aspects, including derivations of some of the important results.
Topics covered include the determination of surface mass densities of
intervening lenses, as well as the statistical analysis of distortions of
galaxy images by general inhomogeneities (cosmic shear), both in 2D projection
on the sky, and in 3D where source distance information is available. 3D mass
reconstruction and the shear ratio test are also considered, and the
sensitivity of observables to Dark Energy is used to show how its equation of
state may be determined using weak lensing. Finally, the article considers the
prospect of testing Einstein's General Relativity with weak lensing, exploiting
the differences in growth rates of perturbations in different models.}
\abstract{In these lectures I give an overview of gravitational lensing,
concentrating on theoretical aspects, including derivations of some of the
important results. Topics covered include the determination of surface mass
densities of intervening lenses, as well as the statistical analysis of
distortions of galaxy images by general inhomogeneities (cosmic shear), both in
2D projection on the sky, and in 3D where source distance information is
available. 3D mass reconstruction and the shear ratio test are also considered,
and the sensitivity of observables to Dark Energy is used to show how its
equation of state may be determined using weak lensing. Finally, the article
considers the prospect of testing Einstein's General Relativity with weak
lensing, exploiting the differences in growth rates of perturbations in
different models.Comment: Lectures given at Como Summer School 2007, now published (in 'Dark
Matter and Dark Energy', 2011, ASSL 370, eds. Matarrese, Colpi, Gorini,
Moschella
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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 ÎŒm. 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