50 research outputs found
Characterization and correction of charge-induced pixel shifts in DECam
Interaction of charges in CCDs with the already accumulated charge
distribution causes both a flux dependence of the point-spread function (an
increase of observed size with flux, also known as the brighter/fatter effect)
and pixel-to-pixel correlations of the Poissonian noise in flat fields. We
describe these effects in the Dark Energy Camera (DECam) with charge dependent
shifts of effective pixel borders, i.e. the Antilogus et al. (2014) model,
which we fit to measurements of flat-field Poissonian noise correlations. The
latter fall off approximately as a power-law r^-2.5 with pixel separation r,
are isotropic except for an asymmetry in the direct neighbors along rows and
columns, are stable in time, and are weakly dependent on wavelength. They show
variations from chip to chip at the 20% level that correlate with the silicon
resistivity. The charge shifts predicted by the model cause biased shape
measurements, primarily due to their effect on bright stars, at levels
exceeding weak lensing science requirements. We measure the flux dependence of
star images and show that the effect can be mitigated by applying the reverse
charge shifts at the pixel level during image processing. Differences in
stellar size, however, remain significant due to residuals at larger distance
from the centroid.Comment: typo and formatting fixes, matches version published in JINS
PyMorph: Automated Galaxy Structural Parameter Estimation using Python
We present a new software pipeline -- PyMorph -- for automated estimation of
structural parameters of galaxies. Both parametric fits through a two
dimensional bulge disk decomposition as well as structural parameter
measurements like concentration, asymmetry etc. are supported. The pipeline is
designed to be easy to use yet flexible; individual software modules can be
replaced with ease. A find-and-fit mode is available so that all galaxies in a
image can be measured with a simple command. A parallel version of the Pymorph
pipeline runs on computer clusters and a Virtual Observatory compatible web
enabled interface is under development.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures, 1 table, accepted for publication in MNRA
Astrophysical Tests of Modified Gravity: A Screening Map of the Nearby Universe
Astrophysical tests of modified modified gravity theories in the nearby
universe have been emphasized recently by Hui, Nicolis and Stubbs (2009) and
Jain and VanderPlas (2011). A key element of such tests is the screening
mechanism whereby general relativity is restored in massive halos or high
density environments like the Milky Way. In chameleon theories of gravity,
including all f(R) models, field dwarf galaxies may be unscreened and therefore
feel an extra force, as opposed to screened galaxies. The first step to study
differences between screened and unscreened galaxies is to create a 3D
screening map. We use N-body simulations to test and calibrate simple
approximations to determine the level of screening in galaxy catalogs. Sources
of systematic errors in the screening map due to observational inaccuracies are
modeled and their contamination is estimated. We then apply our methods to
create a map out to 200 Mpc in the Sloan Digital Sky Survey footprint using
data from the Sloan survey and other sources. In two companion papers this map
will be used to carry out new tests of gravity using distance indicators and
the disks of dwarf galaxies. We also make our screening map publicly available.Comment: 21 pages, 10 figure
Quantitative measure of evolution of bright cluster galaxies at moderate redshifts
Using archival data from the Hubble Space Telescope, we study the
quantitative morphological evolution of spectroscopically confirmed bright
galaxies in the core regions of nine clusters ranging in redshift from to . We use morphological parameters derived from two
dimensional bulge-disk decomposition to study the evolution. We find an
increase in the mean bulge-to-total luminosity ratio as the Universe
evolves. We also find a corresponding increase in the fraction of early type
galaxies and in the mean S\'ersic index. We discuss these results and their
implications to physical mechanisms for evolution of galaxy morphology.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRAS: Letter
Astrophysical Tests of Modified Gravity: Constraints from Distance Indicators in the Nearby Universe
We use distance measurements in the nearby universe to carry out new tests of
gravity, surpassing other astrophysical tests by over two orders of magnitude
for chameleon theories. The three nearby distance indicators -- cepheids, tip
of the red giant branch (TRGB) stars, and water masers -- operate in
gravitational fields of widely different strengths. This enables tests of
scalar-tensor gravity theories because they are screened from enhanced forces
to different extents. Inferred distances from cepheids and TRGB stars are
altered (in opposite directions) over a range of chameleon gravity theory
parameters well below the sensitivity of cosmological probes. Using published
data we have compared cepheid and TRGB distances in a sample of unscreened
dwarf galaxies within 10 Mpc. As a control sample we use a comparable set of
screened galaxies. We find no evidence for the order unity force enhancements
expected in these theories. Using a two-parameter description of the models
(the coupling strength and background field value) we obtain constraints on
chameleon and symmetron screening scenarios. In particular we show that f(R)
models with background field values fR0 above 5e-7 are ruled out at the 95%
confidence level. We also compare TRGB and maser distances to the galaxy NGC
4258 as a second test for larger field values. While there are several
approximations and caveats in our study, our analysis demonstrates the power of
gravity tests in the local universe. We discuss the prospects for additional,
improved tests with future observations.Comment: 37 pages, 5 figure