1,010 research outputs found
Lensing effect on polarization in microwave background: extracting convergence power spectrum
Matter inhomogeneities along the line of sight deflect the cosmic microwave
background (CMB) photons originating at the last scattering surface at redshift
. These distortions modify the pattern of CMB polarization. We
identify specific combinations of Stokes and parameters that correspond
to spin 0, variables and can be used to reconstruct the projected matter
density. We compute the expected signal to noise as a function of detector
sensitivity and angular resolution. With Planck satellite the detection would
be at a few level. Several times better detector sensitivity would be
needed to measure the projected dark matter power spectrum over a wider range
of scales, which could provide an independent confirmation of the projected
matter power spectrum as measured from other methods.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Lensed CMB power spectra from all-sky correlation functions
Weak lensing of the CMB changes the unlensed temperature anisotropy and
polarization power spectra. Accounting for the lensing effect will be crucial
to obtain accurate parameter constraints from sensitive CMB observations.
Methods for computing the lensed power spectra using a low-order perturbative
expansion are not good enough for percent-level accuracy. Non-perturbative
flat-sky methods are more accurate, but curvature effects change the spectra at
the 0.3-1% level. We describe a new, accurate and fast, full-sky
correlation-function method for computing the lensing effect on CMB power
spectra to better than 0.1% at l<2500 (within the approximation that the
lensing potential is linear and Gaussian). We also discuss the effect of
non-linear evolution of the gravitational potential on the lensed power
spectra. Our fast numerical code is publicly available.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures. Changes to match PRD version including new
section on non-linear corrections. CAMB code available at http://camb.info
A Lensing Reconstruction of Primordial Cosmic Microwave Background Polarization
We discuss a possibility to directly reconstruct the CMB polarization field
at the last scattering surface by accounting for modifications imposed by the
gravitational lensing effect. The suggested method requires a tracer field of
the large scale structure lensing potentials that deflected propagating CMB
photons from the last scattering surface. This required information can come
from a variety of observations on the large scale structure matter
distribution, including convergence reconstructed from lensing shear studies
involving galaxy shapes. In the case of so-called curl, or B,-modes of CMB
polarization, the reconstruction allows one to identify the distinct signature
of inflationary gravitational waves.Comment: 6 pages, 2 figures; PRD submitte
Halo stochasticity in global clustering analysis
In the present work we study the statistics of haloes, which in the halo
model determines the distribution of galaxies. Haloes are known to be biased
tracer of dark matter, and at large scales it is usually assumed there is no
intrinsic stochasticity between the two fields. Following the work of Seljak &
Warren (2004), we explore how correct this assumption is and, moving a step
further, we try to qualify the nature of stochasticity. We use Principal
Component Analysis applied to the outputs of a cosmological N-body simulation
to: (1) explore the behaviour of stochasticity in the correlation between
haloes of different masses; (2) explore the behaviour of stochasticity in the
correlation between haloes and dark matter. We show results obtained using a
catalogue with 2.1 million haloes, from a PMFAST simulation with box size of
1000h^{-1}Mpc. In the relation between different populations of haloes we find
that stochasticity is not-negligible even at large scales. In agreement with
the conclusions of Tegmark & Bromley (1999) who studied the correlations of
different galaxy populations, we found that the shot-noise subtracted
stochasticity is qualitatively different from `enhanced' shot noise and,
specifically, it is dominated by a single stochastic eigenvalue. We call this
the `minimally stochastic' scenario, as opposed to shot noise which is
`maximally stochastic'. In the correlation between haloes and dark matter, we
find that stochasticity is minimized, as expected, near the dark matter peak (k
~ 0.02 h Mpc^{-1} for a LambdaCDM cosmology) and, even at large scales, it is
of the order of 15 per cent above the shot noise. Moreover, we find that the
reconstruction of the dark matter distribution is improved when we use
eigenvectors as tracers of the bias. [Abridged]Comment: 9 pages, 12 figures. Submitted to MNRA
CMB B-polarization to map the Large-scale Structures of the Universe
We explore the possibility of using the B-type polarization of the CMB to map
the large-scale structures of the Universe taking advantage of the lens effects
on the CMB polarization. The functional relation between the B component with
the primordial CMB polarization and the line-of-sight mass distribution is
explicited. Noting that a sizeable fraction (at least 40%) of the dark halo
population which is responsible of this effect can also be detected in galaxy
weak lensing survey, we present statistical quantities that should exhibit a
strong sensitivity to this overlapping. We stress that it would be a sound test
of the gravitational instability picture, independent on many systematic
effects that may hamper lensing detection in CMB or galaxy survey alone.
Moreover we estimate the intrinsic cosmic variance of the amplitude of this
effect to be less than 8% for a 100, deg^2 survey with a 10' CMB beam. Its
measurement would then provide us with an original mean for constraining the
cosmological parameters, more particularly, as it turns out, the cosmological
constant Lambda.Comment: Latex2e with REVTEX ; 14 pages, 8 figure
CMB Lensing Reconstruction on the Full Sky
Gravitational lensing of the microwave background by the intervening dark
matter mainly arises from large-angle fluctuations in the projected
gravitational potential and hence offers a unique opportunity to study the
physics of the dark sector at large scales. Studies with surveys that cover
greater than a percent of the sky will require techniques that incorporate the
curvature of the sky. We lay the groundwork for these studies by deriving the
full sky minimum variance quadratic estimators of the lensing potential from
the CMB temperature and polarization fields. We also present a general
technique for constructing these estimators, with harmonic space convolutions
replaced by real space products, that is appropriate for both the full sky
limit and the flat sky approximation. This also extends previous treatments to
include estimators involving the temperature-polarization cross-correlation and
should be useful for next generation experiments in which most of the
additional information from polarization comes from this channel due to
sensitivity limitations.Comment: Accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. D; typos correcte
On the Long-Range Exciton Transport in Molecular Systems: The Application to H-Aggregated Heterotriangulene Chains
© 2017 American Chemical Society. Self-assembled aggregates of pigment molecules are potential building blocks for excitonic circuits that find their application in energy conversion and optical signal processing. Recent experimental studies of one-dimensional heterotriangulene supramolecular aggregates suggested that singlet excitons in these structures can propagate on several micron distances. We explore this possibility theoretically by combining electronic structure calculations with microscopic models for exciton transport. A detailed characterization of the structural disorder and exciton decoherence is provided. We argue that advanced, well-established exciton transport models, used in our study, give about one order of magnitude shorter estimates for the exciton propagation length which suggest that there are other possible explanations of the experimental results
A comparative study of biodegradation of vinyl acetate by environmental strains
Four Gram-negative strains, E3_2001, EC1_2004, EC3_3502 and EC2_3502, previously isolated from soil samples, were subjected to comparative studies in order to select the best vinyl acetate degrader for waste gas treatment. Comparison of biochemical and physiological tests as well as the results of fatty acids analyses were comparable with the results of 16S rRNA gene sequence analyses. The isolated strains were identified as Pseudomonas putida EC3_2001, Pseudomonas putida EC1_2004, Achromobacter xylosoxidans EC3_3502 and Agrobacterium sp. EC2_3502 strains. Two additional strains, Pseudomonas fluorescens PCM 2123 and Stenotrophomonas malthophilia KB2, were used as controls. All described strains were able to use vinyl acetate as the only source of carbon and energy under aerobic as well as oxygen deficiency conditions. Esterase, alcohol dehydrogenase and aldehyde dehydrogenase were involved in vinyl acetate decomposition under aerobic conditions. Shorter degradation times of vinyl acetate were associated with accumulation of acetic acid, acetaldehyde and ethanol as intermediates in the culture fluids of EC3_2001 and KB2 strains. Complete aerobic degradation of vinyl acetate combined with a low increase in biomass was observed for EC3_2001 and EC1_2004 strains. In conclusion, P. putida EC1_2004 is proposed as the best vinyl acetate degrader for future waste gas treatment in trickle-bed bioreactors
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