30 research outputs found
Bayesian astrostatistics: a backward look to the future
This perspective chapter briefly surveys: (1) past growth in the use of
Bayesian methods in astrophysics; (2) current misconceptions about both
frequentist and Bayesian statistical inference that hinder wider adoption of
Bayesian methods by astronomers; and (3) multilevel (hierarchical) Bayesian
modeling as a major future direction for research in Bayesian astrostatistics,
exemplified in part by presentations at the first ISI invited session on
astrostatistics, commemorated in this volume. It closes with an intentionally
provocative recommendation for astronomical survey data reporting, motivated by
the multilevel Bayesian perspective on modeling cosmic populations: that
astronomers cease producing catalogs of estimated fluxes and other source
properties from surveys. Instead, summaries of likelihood functions (or
marginal likelihood functions) for source properties should be reported (not
posterior probability density functions), including nontrivial summaries (not
simply upper limits) for candidate objects that do not pass traditional
detection thresholds.Comment: 27 pp, 4 figures. A lightly revised version of a chapter in
"Astrostatistical Challenges for the New Astronomy" (Joseph M. Hilbe, ed.,
Springer, New York, forthcoming in 2012), the inaugural volume for the
Springer Series in Astrostatistics. Version 2 has minor clarifications and an
additional referenc
Superluminal neutrinos in long baseline experiments and SN1987a
Precise tests of Lorentz invariance in neutrinos can be performed using long
baseline experiments such as MINOS and OPERA or neutrinos from astrophysical
sources. The MINOS collaboration reported a measurement of the muonic neutrino
velocities that hints to super-luminal propagation, very recently confirmed at
6 sigma by OPERA. We consider a general parametrisation which goes beyond the
usual linear or quadratic violation considered in quantum-gravitational models.
We also propose a toy model showing why Lorentz violation can be specific to
the neutrino sector and give rise to a generic energy behaviour E^alpha, where
alpha is not necessarily an integer number. Supernova bounds and the preferred
MINOS and OPERA regions show a tension, due to the absence of shape distortion
in the neutrino bunch in the far detector of MINOS. The energy independence of
the effect has also been pointed out by the OPERA results.Comment: 22 pages, 7 figures; comment on Cherenkov emission added, version
matching JHEP published pape
Cosmological Birefringence: an Astrophysical test of Fundamental Physics
We review the methods used to test for the existence of cosmological
birefringence, i.e. a rotation of the plane of linear polarization for
electromagnetic radiation traveling over cosmological distances, which might
arise in a number of important contexts involving the violation of fundamental
physical principles. The main methods use: (1) the radio polarization of radio
galaxies and quasars, (2) the ultraviolet polarization of radio galaxies, and
(3) the cosmic microwave background polarization. We discuss the main results
obtained so far, the advantages and disadvantages of each method, and future
prospects.Comment: To appear in the Proceedings of the JENAM 2010 Symposium "From
Varying Couplings to Fundamental Physics", held in Lisbon, 6-10 Sept. 201
Non-Standard Neutrino Propagation and Pion Decay
Motivated by the findings of the OPERA experiment, we discuss the hypothesis
that neutrino propagation does not obey Einstein special relativity. Under a
minimal set of modifications of the standard model Lagrangian, we consider the
implications of non standard neutrino propagation on the description of
neutrino interactions and, specifically, on the pion decay processes. We show
that all the different dispersion relations which have been proposed so far to
explain OPERA results, imply huge departures from the standard expectations.
The decay channel becomes significantly larger than
in the standard scenario, and may even dominate over . Moreover, the spectral distribution of neutrinos produced in the decay
processes and the probability that a pion decays in flight in neutrinos show
large deviations from the standard results.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figures, version accepted in JHE
State of the Field: Extreme Precision Radial Velocities
The Second Workshop on Extreme Precision Radial Velocities defined circa 2015
the state of the art Doppler precision and identified the critical path
challenges for reaching 10 cm/s measurement precision. The presentations and
discussion of key issues for instrumentation and data analysis and the workshop
recommendations for achieving this precision are summarized here.
Beginning with the HARPS spectrograph, technological advances for precision
radial velocity measurements have focused on building extremely stable
instruments. To reach still higher precision, future spectrometers will need to
produce even higher fidelity spectra. This should be possible with improved
environmental control, greater stability in the illumination of the
spectrometer optics, better detectors, more precise wavelength calibration, and
broader bandwidth spectra. Key data analysis challenges for the precision
radial velocity community include distinguishing center of mass Keplerian
motion from photospheric velocities, and the proper treatment of telluric
contamination. Success here is coupled to the instrument design, but also
requires the implementation of robust statistical and modeling techniques.
Center of mass velocities produce Doppler shifts that affect every line
identically, while photospheric velocities produce line profile asymmetries
with wavelength and temporal dependencies that are different from Keplerian
signals.
Exoplanets are an important subfield of astronomy and there has been an
impressive rate of discovery over the past two decades. Higher precision radial
velocity measurements are required to serve as a discovery technique for
potentially habitable worlds and to characterize detections from transit
missions. The future of exoplanet science has very different trajectories
depending on the precision that can ultimately be achieved with Doppler
measurements.Comment: 45 pages, 23 Figures, workshop summary proceeding
Measurement of jet-substructure observables in top quark, W boson and light jet production in proton-proton collisions at √s=13 TeV with the ATLAS detector
A measurement of jet substructure observables is presented using data collected in 2016 by the ATLAS experiment at the LHC with proton-proton collisions at s√ = 13 TeV. Large-radius jets groomed with the trimming and soft-drop algorithms are studied. Dedicated event selections are used to study jets produced by light quarks or gluons, and hadronically decaying top quarks and W bosons. The observables measured are sensitive to substructure, and therefore are typically used for tagging large-radius jets from boosted massive particles. These include the energy correlation functions and the N-subjettiness variables. The number of subjets and the Les Houches angularity are also considered. The distributions of the substructure variables, corrected for detector effects, are compared to the predictions of various Monte Carlo event generators. They are also compared between the large-radius jets originating from light quarks or gluons, and hadronically decaying top quarks and W bosons
SN 1987A: Historical view about registration of the neutrino signal with Baksan, KAMIOKANDE II and IMB detectors
The detection of neutrinos from SN 1987A opened a new era in neutrino astrophysics in the last century. We present a historical view about registration of the neutrino signal from supernova SN 1987A in the Large Magellanic Cloud by the BAKSAN liquid scintillator detector and by the two water Cherenkov detectors — Kamiokande-II and IMB. All three detectors observed a total neutrino signal of 24 events at 7:35 UT 23 February, 1987. I will concentrate mostly about the BAKSAN supernova group analysis of the neutrino signal, which was already done in the years 1987 and 1988. The results of this analysis (determination of average properties of the neutrino signal: the total energy of neutrino emission, the effective neutrino temperature, the total luminosity of the neutrino signal, duration of the neutrino burst) are presented. The common analysis of all three detectors shows that these 'parameters' have good agreement with the general theoretical description of explosions of supernovae. The analysis shows that the inclusion of the BAKSAN data is very important for the understanding of the SN87A event. The latest results of 20 years of observation of our Galaxy by the BAKSAN scintillation telescope show that the upper limit of the mean frequency of gravitational collapses is <0.13 yr^-1 at a 90% confidence level