6,389 research outputs found
Radio Galaxy Clustering at z~0.3
Radio galaxies are uniquely useful as probes of large-scale structure as
their uniform identification with giant elliptical galaxies out to high
redshift means that the evolution of their bias factor can be predicted. As the
initial stage in a project to study large-scale structure with radio galaxies
we have performed a small redshift survey, selecting 29 radio galaxies in the
range 0.19<z<0.45 from a contiguous 40 square degree area of sky. We detect
significant clustering within this sample. The amplitude of the two-point
correlation function we measure is consistent with no evolution from the local
(z<0.1) value. This is as expected in a model in which radio galaxy hosts form
at high redshift and thereafter obey a continuity equation, although the
signal:noise of the detection is too low to rule out other models. Larger
surveys out to z~1 should reveal the structures of superclusters at
intermediate redshifts and strongly constrain models for the evolution of
large-scale structure.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, accepted by ApJ Letter
Measuring the galaxy power spectrum with multiresolution decomposition -- II. diagonal and off-diagonal power spectra of the LCRS galaxies
The power spectrum estimator based on the discrete wavelet transform (DWT)
for 3-dimensional samples has been studied. The DWT estimator for
multi-dimensional samples provides two types of spectra with respect to
diagonal and off-diagonal modes, which are very flexible to deal with
configuration-related problems in the power spectrum detection. With simulation
samples and mock catalogues of the Las Campanas redshift survey (LCRS), we show
(1) the slice-like geometry of the LCRS doesn't affect the off-diagonal power
spectrum with ``slice-like'' mode; (2) the Poisson sampling with the LCRS
selection function doesn't cause more than 1- error in the DWT power
spectrum; and (3) the powers of peculiar velocity fluctuations, which cause the
redshift distortion, are approximately scale-independent. These results insure
that the uncertainties of the power spectrum measurement are under control. The
scatter of the DWT power spectra of the six strips of the LCRS survey is found
to be rather small. It is less than 1- of the cosmic variance of mock
samples in the wavenumber range h Mpc. To fit the detected
LCRS diagonal DWT power spectrum with CDM models, we find that the best-fitting
redshift distortion parameter is about the same as that obtained from
the Fourier power spectrum. The velocity dispersions for SCDM and
CDM models are also consistent with other detections with
the LCRS. A systematic difference between the best-fitting parameters of
diagonal and off-diagonal power spectra has been significantly measured. This
indicates that the off-diagonal power spectra are capable of providing
information about the power spectrum of galaxy velocity field.Comment: AAS LaTeX file, 41 pages, 10 figures included, accepted for
publication in Ap
Correlations in the Spatial Power Spectrum Inferred from Angular Clustering: Methods and Application to APM
We reconsider the inference of spatial power spectra from angular clustering
data and show how to include correlations in both the angular correlation
function and the spatial power spectrum. Inclusion of the full covariance
matrices loosens the constraints on large-scale structure inferred from the APM
survey by over a factor of two. We present a new inversion technique based on
singular value decomposition that allows one to propagate the covariance matrix
on the angular correlation function through to that of the spatial power
spectrum and to reconstruct smooth power spectra without underestimating the
errors. Within a parameter space of the CDM shape Gamma and the amplitude
sigma_8, we find that the angular correlations in the APM survey constrain
Gamma to be 0.19-0.37 at 68% confidence when fit to scales larger than k=0.2h
Mpc^-1. A downturn in power at k<0.04h Mpc^-1 is significant at only 1-sigma.
These results are optimistic as we include only Gaussian statistical errors and
neglect any boundary effects.Comment: 37 pages, LaTex, 9 figures. Submitted to Ap
Measuring the galaxy power spectrum with future redshift surveys
Precision measurements of the galaxy power spectrum P(k) require a data
analysis pipeline that is both fast enough to be computationally feasible and
accurate enough to take full advantage of high-quality data. We present a
rigorous discussion of different methods of power spectrum estimation, with
emphasis on the traditional Fourier method, the linear (Karhunen-Loeve; KL),
and quadratic data compression schemes, showing in what approximations they
give the same result. To improve speed, we show how many of the advantages of
KL data compression and power spectrum estimation may be achieved with a
computationally faster quadratic method. To improve accuracy, we derive
analytic expressions for handling the integral constraint, since it is crucial
that finite volume effects are accurately corrected for on scales comparable to
the depth of the survey. We also show that for the KL and quadratic techniques,
multiple constraints can be included via simple matrix operations, thereby
rendering the results less sensitive to galactic extinction and mis-estimates
of the radial selection function. We present a data analysis pipeline that we
argue does justice to the increases in both quality and quantity of data that
upcoming redshift surveys will provide. It uses three analysis techniques in
conjunction: a traditional Fourier approach on small scales, a pixelized
quadratic matrix method on large scales and a pixelized KL eigenmode analysis
to probe anisotropic effects such as redshift-space distortions.Comment: Major revisions for clarity. Matches accepted ApJ version. 23 pages,
with 2 figs included. Color figure and links at
http://www.sns.ias.edu/~max/galpower.html (faster from the US), from
http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/~max/galpower.html (faster from Europe) or
from [email protected]
Dynamical Masses in Modified Gravity
Differences in masses inferred from dynamics, such as velocity dispersions or
X-rays, and those inferred from lensing are a generic prediction of modified
gravity theories. Viable models however must include some non-linear mechanism
to restore General Relativity (GR) in dense environments, which is necessary to
pass Solar System constraints on precisely these deviations. In this paper, we
study the dynamics within virialized structures in the context of two modified
gravity models, f(R) gravity and DGP. The non-linear mechanisms to restore GR,
which f(R) and DGP implement in very different ways, have a strong impact on
the dynamics in bound objects; they leave distinctive signatures in the
dynamical mass-lensing mass relation as a function of mass and radius. We
present measurements from N-body simulations of f(R) and DGP, as well as
semi-analytical models which match the simulation results to surprising
accuracy in both cases. The semi-analytical models are useful for making the
connection to observations. Our results confirm that the environment- and
scale-dependence of the modified gravity effects have to be taken into account
when confronting gravity theories with observations of dynamics in galaxies and
clusters.Comment: 18 pages, 16 figures; submitted to PRD; v2: typos corrected,
references added, minor additions (Sec. IID
The Evolution of Radio Galaxies at Intermediate Redshift
We describe a new estimate of the radio galaxy 1.4 GHz luminosity function
and its evolution at intermediate redshifts (z~0.4). Photometric redshifts and
color selection have been used to select Bj<23.5 early-type galaxies from the
Panoramic Deep Fields, a multicolor survey of two 25 sq deg fields.
Approximately 230 radio galaxies have then been selected by matching early-type
galaxies with NVSS radio sources brighter than 5 mJy. Estimates of the 1.4 GHz
luminosity function of radio galaxies measure significant evolution over the
observed redshift range. For an Omega_M=1 cosmology the evolution of the radio
power is consistent with luminosity evolution where P(z)=P(0)(1+z)^{k_L} and
3<k_L<5. The observed evolution is similar to that observed for UVX and X-ray
selected AGN and is consistent with the same physical process being responsible
for the optical and radio luminosity evolution of AGN.Comment: 26 pages, 9 Figures, Accepted for Publication in A
Outdoor learning spaces: the case of forest school
© 2017 The Author. Area published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers). This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.This paper contributes to the growing body of research concerning use of outdoor spaces by educators, and the increased use of informal and outdoor learning spaces when teaching primary school children. The research takes the example of forest school, a form of regular and repeated outdoor learning increasingly common in primary schools. This research focuses on how the learning space at forest school shapes the experience of children and forest school leaders as they engage in learning outside the classroom. The learning space is considered as a physical space, and also in a more metaphorical way as a space where different behaviours are permitted, and a space set apart from the national curriculum. Through semi-structured interviews with members of the community of practice of forest school leaders, the paper seeks to determine the significance of being outdoors on the forest school experience. How does this learning space differ from the classroom environment? What aspects of the forest school learning space support pupilsâ experiences? How does the outdoor learning space affect teaching, and the dynamics of learning while at forest school? The research shows that the outdoor space provides new opportunities for children and teachers to interact and learn, and revealed how forest school leaders and children co-create a learning environment in which the boundaries between classroom and outdoor learning, teacher and pupil, are renegotiated to stimulate teaching and learning. Forest school practitioners see forest school as a separate learning space that is removed from the physical constraints of the classroom and pedagogical constraints of the national curriculum to provide a more flexible and responsive learning environment.Peer reviewe
Dynamics of inflationary cosmology in TVSD model
Within the framework of a model Universe with time variable space dimensions
(TVSD), known as decrumpling or TVSD model, we study TVSD chaotic inflation and
obtain dynamics of the inflaton, scale factor and spatial dimension. We also
study the quantum fluctuations of the inflaton field and obtain the spectral
index and its running in this model. Two classes of examples have been studied
and comparisons made with the standard slow-roll formulae. We compare our
results with the recent Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) data.Comment: 18 pages, 3 figures, accepted in Mod. Phys. Lett.
Gravitational lens magnification by Abell 1689: Distortion of the background galaxy luminosity function
Gravitational lensing magnifies the luminosity of galaxies behind the lens.
We use this effect to constrain the total mass in the cluster Abell 1689 by
comparing the lensed luminosities of background galaxies with the luminosity
function of an undistorted field. Since galaxies are assumed to be a random
sampling of luminosity space, this method is not limited by clustering noise.
We use photometric redshift information to estimate galaxy distance and
intrinsic luminosity. Knowing the redshift distribution of the background
population allows us to lift the mass/background degeneracy common to lensing
analysis. In this paper we use 9 filters observed over 12 hours with the Calar
Alto 3.5m telescope to determine the redshifts of 1000 galaxies in the field of
Abell 1689. Using a complete sample of 151 background galaxies we measure the
cluster mass profile. We find that the total projected mass interior to
0.25h^(-1)Mpc is (0.48 +/- 0.16) * 10^(15)h^(-1) solar masses, where our error
budget includes uncertainties from the photometric redshift determination, the
uncertainty in the off-set calibration and finite sampling. This result is in
good agreement with that found by number count and shear-based methods and
provides a new and independent method to determine cluster masses.Comment: 13 pages, 10 figures. Submitted to MNRAS (10/99); Replacement with 1
page extra text inc. new section, accepted by MNRA
A Constraint on the Distance Scale to Cosmological Gamma--Ray Bursts
If \g--ray bursts are cosmological in origin, the sources are expected to
trace the large--scale structure of luminous matter in the universe. I use a
new likelihood method that compares the counts--in--cells distribution of
\g--ray bursts in the BATSE 3B catalog with that expected from the known
large--scale structure of the universe, in order to place a constraint on the
distance scale to cosmological bursts. I find, at the 95\% confidence level,
that the comoving distance to the ``edge'' of the burst distribution is greater
than ~Mpc (), and that the nearest burst is farther than
~Mpc. The median distance to the nearest burst is ~Mpc,
implying that the total energy released in \g--rays during a burst event is of
order ergs. None of the bursts that have been observed
by BATSE are in nearby galaxies, nor is a signature from the Coma cluster or
the ``Great Wall'' likely to be seen in the data at present.Comment: 15 LaTeX pages with 2 encapsulated Postscript figures included, uses
AASTeX (v. 4.0) available at ftp://ftp.aas.org/pubs
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