968 research outputs found
An Observational Determination of the Proton to Electron Mass Ratio in the Early Universe
In an effort to resolve the discrepancy between two measurements of the
fundamental constant mu, the proton to electron mass ratio, at early times in
the universe we reanalyze the same data used in the earlier studies. Our
analysis of the molecular hydrogen absorption lines in archival VLT/UVES
spectra of the damped Lyman alpha systems in the QSOs Q0347-383 and Q0405-443
yields a combined measurement of a (Delta mu)/mu value of (-7 +/- 8) x 10^{-6},
consistent with no change in the value of mu over a time span of 11.5
gigayears. Here we define (Delta mu) as (mu_z - mu_0) where mu_z is the value
of mu at a redshift of z and mu_0 is the present day value. Our null result is
consistent with the recent measurements of King et al. 2009, (Delta mu)/u =
(2.6 +/- 3.0) x 10^{-6}, and inconsistent with the positive detection of a
change in mu by Reinhold et al. 2006. Both of the previous studies and this
study are based on the same data but with differing analysis methods.
Improvements in the wavelength calibration over the UVES pipeline calibration
is a key element in both of the null results. This leads to the conclusion that
the fundamental constant mu is unchanged to an accuracy of 10^{-5} over the
last 80% of the age of the universe, well into the matter dominated epoch. This
limit provides constraints on models of dark energy that invoke rolling scalar
fields and also limits the parameter space of Super Symmetric or string theory
models of physics. New instruments, both planned and under construction, will
provide opportunities to greatly improve the accuracy of these measurements.Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journa
Detection of Baryon Acoustic Oscillation Features in the Large-Scale 3-Point Correlation Function of SDSS BOSS DR12 CMASS Galaxies
We present the large-scale 3-point correlation function (3PCF) of the SDSS
DR12 CMASS sample of Luminous Red Galaxies, the largest-ever sample
used for a 3PCF or bispectrum measurement. We make the first high-significance
() detection of Baryon Acoustic Oscillations (BAO) in the 3PCF.
Using these acoustic features in the 3PCF as a standard ruler, we measure the
distance to to precision (statistical plus systematic). We
find for our
fiducial cosmology (consistent with Planck 2015) and bias model. This
measurement extends the use of the BAO technique from the 2-point correlation
function (2PCF) and power spectrum to the 3PCF and opens an avenue for deriving
additional cosmological distance information from future large-scale structure
redshift surveys such as DESI. Our measured distance scale from the 3PCF is
fairly independent from that derived from the pre-reconstruction 2PCF and is
equivalent to increasing the length of BOSS by roughly 10\%; reconstruction
appears to lower the independence of the distance measurements. Fitting a model
including tidal tensor bias yields a moderate significance (
detection of this bias with a value in agreement with the prediction from local
Lagrangian biasing.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, submitted MNRA
Evaluation of Radiation and Design Criteria for a Lunar Habitat
Extraterrestrial habitation has long been the object of science fiction, and experts in the fields of science and engineering have proposed many designs for a lunar base. The research conducted has focused on either structural stability, radiation protection, or meteorite-impact vulnerabilities, but rarely have these been considered together. The Resilient ExtraTerrestrial Habitats (RETH) project aims to design a lunar habitat from a hazards perspective, considering general degradation, meteorite impacts, seismic activity, radiation exposure, thermal extremes, and geomagnetic storms in addition to the physiological, psychological, and sociological aspects of astronauts living in such a habitat. Several members of the RETH team will begin the project by each quantifying an individual hazard and proposing a solution which, when combined with other membersâ research, will provide specific parameters used in designing a safe, self-sustaining lunar or planetary outpost. This paper focuses on the effects of cosmic and solar radiation which can be detrimental to the health of future lunar inhabitants, and as such, quantifying the amount of radiation present in the environment is vital. Different materials such as aluminum, polyethylene, water, and regolith can provide adequate shielding with varying thickness, though the possibility of using lunar lava tubes remains open
Characterizing unknown systematics in large scale structure surveys
Photometric large scale structure (LSS) surveys probe the largest volumes in
the Universe, but are inevitably limited by systematic uncertainties. Imperfect
photometric calibration leads to biases in our measurements of the density
fields of LSS tracers such as galaxies and quasars, and as a result in
cosmological parameter estimation. Earlier studies have proposed using
cross-correlations between different redshift slices or cross-correlations
between different surveys to reduce the effects of such systematics. In this
paper we develop a method to characterize unknown systematics. We demonstrate
that while we do not have sufficient information to correct for unknown
systematics in the data, we can obtain an estimate of their magnitude. We
define a parameter to estimate contamination from unknown systematics using
cross-correlations between different redshift slices and propose discarding
bins in the angular power spectrum that lie outside a certain contamination
tolerance level. We show that this method improves estimates of the bias using
simulated data and further apply it to photometric luminous red galaxies in the
Sloan Digital Sky Survey as a case study.Comment: 24 pages, 6 figures; Expanded discussion of results, added figure 2;
Version to be published in JCA
The clustering of galaxies in the completed SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey: tomographic BAO analysis of DR12 combined sample in configuration space
We perform a tomographic baryon acoustic oscillations analysis using the
two-point galaxy correlation function measured from the combined sample of BOSS
DR12, which covers the redshift range of . Splitting the sample
into multiple overlapping redshift slices to extract the redshift information
of galaxy clustering, we obtain a measurement of and at
nine effective redshifts with the full covariance matrix calibrated using
MultiDark-Patchy mock catalogues. Using the reconstructed galaxy catalogues, we
obtain the precision of for and for
. To quantify the gain from the tomographic information, we compare
the constraints on the cosmological parameters using our 9-bin BAO
measurements, the consensus 3-bin BAO and RSD measurements at three effective
redshifts in \citet{Alam2016}, and the non-tomographic (1-bin) BAO measurement
at a single effective redshift. Comparing the 9-bin with 1-bin constraint
result, it can improve the dark energy Figure of Merit by a factor of 1.24 for
the Chevallier-Polarski-Linder parametrisation for equation of state parameter
. The errors of and from 9-bin constraints are slightly
improved when compared to the 3-bin constraint result.Comment: 14 pages, 21 figures, 7 Tables. Submitted to MNRA
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