1,070 research outputs found

    Euclid preparation:XXX. Performance assessment of the NISP red grism through spectroscopic simulations for the wide and deep surveys

    Get PDF
    This work focusses on the pilot run of a simulation campaign aimed at investigating the spectroscopic capabilities of the Euclid Near-Infrared Spectrometer and Photometer (NISP), in terms of continuum and emission line detection in the context of galaxy evolutionary studies. To this purpose, we constructed, emulated, and analysed the spectra of 4992 star-forming galaxies at 0:3 ≥ z ≥ 2:5 using the NISP pixel-level simulator. We built the spectral library starting from public multi-wavelength galaxy catalogues, with value-added information on spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting results, and stellar population templates from Bruzual &amp; Charlot (2003, MNRAS, 344, 1000). Rest-frame optical and near-IR nebular emission lines were included using empirical and theoretical relations. Dust attenuation was treated using the Calzetti extinction law accounting for the differential attenuation in line-emitting regions with respect to the stellar continuum. The NISP simulator was configured including instrumental and astrophysical sources of noise such as the dark current, read-out noise, zodiacal background, and out-of-field stray light. In this preliminary study, we avoided contamination due to the overlap of the slitless spectra. For this purpose, we located the galaxies on a grid and simulated only the first order spectra.We inferred the 3.5δ NISP red grism spectroscopic detection limit of the continuum measured in the H band for star-forming galaxies with a median disk half-light radius of 0: 004 at magnitude H = 19:5 = 0:2ABmag for the Euclid Wide Survey and at H = 20:8 = 0:6ABmag for the Euclid Deep Survey. We found a very good agreement with the red grism emission line detection limit requirement for the Wide and Deep surveys. We characterised the effect of the galaxy shape on the detection capability of the red grism and highlighted the degradation of the quality of the extracted spectra as the disk size increased. In particular, we found that the extracted emission line signal-to-noise ratio (S/N) drops by 45% when the disk size ranges from 0: 0025 to 100. These trends lead to a correlation between the emission line S/N and the stellar mass of the galaxy and we demonstrate the effect in a stacking analysis unveiling emission lines otherwise too faint to detect.</p

    Euclid preparation:XXVIII. Modelling of the weak lensing angular power spectrum

    Get PDF
    This work considers which higher-order effects in modelling the cosmic shear angular power spectra must be taken into account for Euclid. We identify which terms are of concern, and quantify their individual and cumulative impact on cosmological parameter inference from Euclid. We compute the values of these higher-order effects using analytic expressions, and calculate the impact on cosmological parameter estimation using the Fisher matrix formalism. We review 24 effects and find the following potentially need to be accounted for: the reduced shear approximation, magnification bias, source-lens clustering, source obscuration, local Universe effects, and the flat Universe assumption. Upon computing these explicitly, and calculating their cosmological parameter biases, using a maximum multipole of ℓ=5000\ell=5000, we find that the magnification bias, source-lens clustering, source obscuration, and local Universe terms individually produce significant (\,>0.25\sigma) cosmological biases in one or more parameters, and accordingly must be accounted for. In total, over all effects, we find biases in Ωm\Omega_{\rm m}, Ωb\Omega_{\rm b}, hh, and σ8\sigma_{8} of 0.73σ0.73\sigma, 0.28σ0.28\sigma, 0.25σ0.25\sigma, and −0.79σ-0.79\sigma, respectively, for flat Λ\LambdaCDM. For the w0waw_0w_aCDM case, we find biases in Ωm\Omega_{\rm m}, Ωb\Omega_{\rm b}, hh, nsn_{\rm s}, σ8\sigma_{8}, and waw_a of 1.49σ1.49\sigma, 0.35σ0.35\sigma, −1.36σ-1.36\sigma, 1.31σ1.31\sigma, −0.84σ-0.84\sigma, and −0.35σ-0.35\sigma, respectively; which are increased relative to the Λ\LambdaCDM due to additional degeneracies as a function of redshift and scale

    Euclid preparation:XXVIII. Modelling of the weak lensing angular power spectrum

    Get PDF
    This work considers which higher-order effects in modelling the cosmic shear angular power spectra must be taken into account for Euclid. We identify which terms are of concern, and quantify their individual and cumulative impact on cosmological parameter inference from Euclid. We compute the values of these higher-order effects using analytic expressions, and calculate the impact on cosmological parameter estimation using the Fisher matrix formalism. We review 24 effects and find the following potentially need to be accounted for: the reduced shear approximation, magnification bias, source-lens clustering, source obscuration, local Universe effects, and the flat Universe assumption. Upon computing these explicitly, and calculating their cosmological parameter biases, using a maximum multipole of ℓ=5000\ell=5000, we find that the magnification bias, source-lens clustering, source obscuration, and local Universe terms individually produce significant (\,>0.25\sigma) cosmological biases in one or more parameters, and accordingly must be accounted for. In total, over all effects, we find biases in Ωm\Omega_{\rm m}, Ωb\Omega_{\rm b}, hh, and σ8\sigma_{8} of 0.73σ0.73\sigma, 0.28σ0.28\sigma, 0.25σ0.25\sigma, and −0.79σ-0.79\sigma, respectively, for flat Λ\LambdaCDM. For the w0waw_0w_aCDM case, we find biases in Ωm\Omega_{\rm m}, Ωb\Omega_{\rm b}, hh, nsn_{\rm s}, σ8\sigma_{8}, and waw_a of 1.49σ1.49\sigma, 0.35σ0.35\sigma, −1.36σ-1.36\sigma, 1.31σ1.31\sigma, −0.84σ-0.84\sigma, and −0.35σ-0.35\sigma, respectively; which are increased relative to the Λ\LambdaCDM due to additional degeneracies as a function of redshift and scale

    Euclid preparation. XXX. Evaluating the weak lensing cluster mass biases using the Three Hundred Project hydrodynamical simulations

    Get PDF
    The photometric catalogue of galaxy clusters extracted from ESA Euclid data is expected to be very competitive for cosmological studies. Using state-of-the-art hydrodynamical simulations, we present systematic analyses simulating the expected weak lensing profiles from clusters in a variety of dynamic states and at wide range of redshifts. In order to derive cluster masses, we use a model consistent with the implementation within the Euclid Consortium of the dedicated processing function and find that, when jointly modelling mass and the concentration parameter of the Navarro-Frenk-White halo profile, the weak lensing masses tend to be, on average, biased low with respect to the true mass. Using a fixed value for the concentration, the mass bias is diminished along with its relative uncertainty. Simulating the weak lensing signal by projecting along the directions of the axes of the moment of inertia tensor ellipsoid, we find that orientation matters: when clusters are oriented along the major axis the lensing signal is boosted, and the recovered weak lensing mass is correspondingly overestimated. Typically, the weak lensing mass bias of individual clusters is modulated by the weak lensing signal-to-noise ratio, and the negative mass bias tends to be larger toward higher redshifts. However, when we use a fixed value of the concentration parameter the redshift evolution trend is reduced. These results provide a solid basis for the weak-lensing mass calibration required by the cosmological application of future cluster surveys from Euclid and Rubin

    The AARTFAAC 60 MHz transients survey

    Get PDF
    We report the experimental setup and overall results of the AARTFAAC wide-field radio survey, which consists of observing the sky within 50∘^\circ of Zenith, with a bandwidth of 3.2 \,MHz, at a cadence of 1 \,s, for 545 \,h. This yielded nearly 4 million snapshots, two per second, of on average 4800 square degrees and a sensitivity of around 60 \,Jy. We find two populations of transient events, one originating from PSR \,B0950++08 and one from strong ionospheric lensing events, as well as a single strong candidate for an extragalactic transient, with a peak flux density of 80±3080\pm30 \,Jy and a dispersion measure of 73±3  pc cm−373\pm3\,\mathrm{~pc~cm^{-3}}, We also set a strong upper limit of 1.1 all-sky per day to the rate of any other populations of fast, bright transients. Lastly, we constrain some previously detected types of transient sources by comparing our detections and limits with other low-frequency radio transient surveys.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures. Published by MNRA

    Euclid preparation. XXX. Evaluating the weak lensing cluster mass biases using the Three Hundred Project hydrodynamical simulations

    Get PDF
    The photometric catalogue of galaxy clusters extracted from ESA Euclid data is expected to be very competitive for cosmological studies. Using state-of-the-art hydrodynamical simulations, we present systematic analyses simulating the expected weak lensing profiles from clusters in a variety of dynamic states and at wide range of redshifts. In order to derive cluster masses, we use a model consistent with the implementation within the Euclid Consortium of the dedicated processing function and find that, when jointly modelling mass and the concentration parameter of the Navarro-Frenk-White halo profile, the weak lensing masses tend to be, on average, biased low with respect to the true mass. Using a fixed value for the concentration, the mass bias is diminished along with its relative uncertainty. Simulating the weak lensing signal by projecting along the directions of the axes of the moment of inertia tensor ellipsoid, we find that orientation matters: when clusters are oriented along the major axis the lensing signal is boosted, and the recovered weak lensing mass is correspondingly overestimated. Typically, the weak lensing mass bias of individual clusters is modulated by the weak lensing signal-to-noise ratio, and the negative mass bias tends to be larger toward higher redshifts. However, when we use a fixed value of the concentration parameter the redshift evolution trend is reduced. These results provide a solid basis for the weak-lensing mass calibration required by the cosmological application of future cluster surveys from Euclid and Rubin

    LOFAR early-time search for coherent radio emission from GRB 180706A

    Get PDF
    © 2019 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.The nature of the central engines of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and the composition of their relativistic jets are still under debate. If the jets are Poynting flux dominated rather than baryon dominated, a coherent radio flare from magnetic re-connection events might be expected with the prompt gamma-ray emission. There are two competing models for the central engines of GRBs; a black hole or a newly formed milli-second magnetar. If the central engine is a magnetar it is predicted to produce coherent radio emission as persistent or flaring activity. In this paper, we present the deepest limits to date for this emission following LOFAR rapid response observations of GRB 180706A. No emission is detected to a 3σ\sigma limit of 1.7 mJy beam−1^{-1} at 144 MHz in a two-hour LOFAR observation starting 4.5 minutes after the gamma-ray trigger. A forced source extraction at the position of GRB 180706A provides a marginally positive (1 sigma) peak flux density of 1.1±0.91.1 \pm 0.9 mJy. The data were time-sliced into different sets of snapshot durations to search for FRB like emission. No short duration emission was detected at the location of the GRB. We compare these results to theoretical models and discuss the implications of a non-detection.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
    • …
    corecore