2,233 research outputs found

    Measurements of the cosmic background radiation

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    Maps of the large scale structure (theta is greater than 6 deg) of the cosmic background radiation covering 90 percent of the sky are now available. The data show a very strong 50-100 sigma (statistical error) dipole component, interpreted as being due to our motion, with a direction of alpha = 11.5 + or - 0.15 hours, sigma = -5.6 + or - 2.0 deg. The inferred direction of the velocity of our galaxy relative to the cosmic background radiation is alpha = 10.6 + or - 0.3 hours, sigma = -2.3 + or - 5 deg. This is 44 deg from the center of the Virgo cluster. After removing the dipole component, the data show a galactic signature but no apparent residual structure. An autocorrelation of the residual data, after substraction of the galactic component from a combined Berkeley (3 mm) and Princeton (12 mm) data sets, show no apparent structure from 10 to 180 deg with a rms of 0.01 mK(sup 2). At 90 percent confidence level limit of .00007 is placed on a quadrupole component

    The Tolman Surface Brightness Test for the Reality of the Expansion. II. The Effect of the Point-Spread Function and Galaxy Ellipticity on the Derived Photometric Parameters

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    To complete the Tolman surface brightness test on the reality of the expansion of the Universe, we need to measure accurately the surface brightness profiles of the high-redshift galaxy sample. We, therefore, investigate the effects of various sizes of point-spread-functions composed of telescope diffraction, CCD pixel resolutions, and ground-based seeing on the measurements of mean surface brightness. We have done the calculations using two synthetic galaxies of effective radii of 0.70" and 0.25" with point-spread functions of 0.1, 0.3, and 0.9 arcseconds. We have also compared actual observations of three high-redshift galaxies in the cluster Cl 1324 + 3011 (z = 0.76) made both with the Keck telescopes in seeing of about 0.9" and with HST which has a PSF that is approximately ten times smaller. The conclusion is that HST data can be used as far into the galaxy image as a Petrosian metric radius of eta = 1.3 magnitudes, whereas the ground-based data will have systematic errors of up to 2.9 magnitudes in the mean surface brightness at eta values of less than 2.2 magnitudes. In the final section, we compare the differences in derived average surface brightness for nearly circular galaxy images compared with highly flattened images. The comparison is made by using the two reduction procedures of (1) integrating the profile curves using circular apertures, and (2) approximating an ``equivalent circular'' galaxy that is highly elongated by using an ``effective'' radius of sqrt{ab}, where a and b are the semi-major and semi-minor axis, respectively, of the best-fitting ellipse. The conclusion is that the two methods of reduction give nearly identical results and that either method can be used to analyze the low and high-redshift galaxy samples used in the Tolman test.Comment: 15 pages, 9 figures; accepted for publication in Astronomical Journa

    The Dipole Observed in the COBE DMR Four-Year Data

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    The largest anisotropy in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) is the ≈3\approx 3 mK dipole assumed to be due to our velocity with respect to the CMB. Using the four year data set from all six channels of the COBE Differential Microwave Radiometers (DMR), we obtain a best-fit dipole amplitude 3.358±0.001±0.0233.358 \pm 0.001 \pm 0.023 mK in the direction (l,b)=(264deg⁥.31±0deg⁥.04±0deg⁥.16,+48deg⁥.05±0deg⁥.02±0deg⁥.09)(l,b)=(264\deg.31 \pm 0\deg.04 \pm 0\deg.16, +48\deg.05 \pm 0\deg.02 \pm 0\deg.09), where the first uncertainties are statistical and the second include calibration and combined systematic uncertainties. This measurement is consistent with previous DMR and FIRAS resultsComment: New and improved version; to be published in ApJ next mont

    Angular Power Spectrum of the Microwave Background Anisotropy seen by the COBE Differential Microwave Radiometer

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    The angular power spectrum estimator developed by Peebles (1973) and Hauser & Peebles (1973) has been modified and applied to the 2 year maps produced by the COBE DMR. The power spectrum of the real sky has been compared to the power spectra of a large number of simulated random skies produced with noise equal to the observed noise and primordial density fluctuation power spectra of power law form, with P(k)∝knP(k) \propto k^n. Within the limited range of spatial scales covered by the COBE DMR, corresponding to spherical harmonic indices 3 \leq \ell \lsim 30, the best fitting value of the spectral index is n=1.25−0.45+0.4n = 1.25^{+0.4}_{-0.45} with the Harrison-Zeldovich value n=1n = 1 approximately 0.5σ\sigma below the best fit. For 3 \leq \ell \lsim 19, the best fit is n=1.46−0.44+0.39n = 1.46^{+0.39}_{-0.44}. Comparing the COBE DMR ΔT/T\Delta T/T at small ℓ\ell to the ΔT/T\Delta T/T at ℓ≈50\ell \approx 50 from degree scale anisotropy experiments gives a smaller range of acceptable spectral indices which includes n=1n = 1.Comment: 22 pages of LaTex using aaspp.sty and epsf.sty with appended Postscript figures, COBE Preprint 94-0

    Cosmic Mach Number as a Function of Overdensity and Galaxy Age

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    We carry out an extensive study of the cosmic Mach number (\mach) on scales of R=5, 10 and 20h^-1Mpc using an LCDM hydrodynamical simulation. We particularly put emphasis on the environmental dependence of \mach on overdensity, galaxy mass, and galaxy age. We start by discussing the difference in the resulting \mach according to different definitions of \mach and different methods of calculation. The simulated Mach numbers are slightly lower than the linear theory predictions even when a non-linear power spectrum was used in the calculation, reflecting the non-linear evolution in the simulation. We find that the observed \mach is higher than the simulated mean by more than 2-standard deviations, which suggests either that the Local Group is in a relatively low-density region or that the true value of \Omega_m is ~ 0.2, significantly lower than the simulated value of 0.37. We show from our simulation that the Mach number is a weakly decreasing function of overdensity. We also investigate the correlations between galaxy age, overdensity and \mach for two different samples of galaxies --- DWARFs and GIANTs. Older systems cluster in higher density regions with lower \mach, while younger ones tend to reside in lower density regions with larger \mach, as expected from the hierarchical structure formation scenario. However, for DWARFs, the correlation is weakened by the fact that some of the oldest DWARFs are left over in low-density regions during the structure formation history. For giant systems, one expects blue-selected samples to have higher \mach than red-selected ones. We briefly comment on the effect of the warm dark matter on the expected Mach number.Comment: 43 pages, including 15 figures. Accepted version in ApJ. Included correlation function of different samples of galaxies, and the cumulative number fraction distribution as a fcn. of overdensity. Reorganized figures and added some reference

    Testing Weak Lensing Maps With Redshift Surveys: A Subaru Field

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    We use a dense redshift survey in the foreground of the Subaru GTO2deg^2 weak lensing field (centered at α2000\alpha_{2000} = 16h04m44s^h04^m44^s;Ύ2000\delta_{2000} =43^\circ11^{\prime}24^{\prime\prime}$) to assess the completeness and comment on the purity of massive halo identification in the weak lensing map. The redshift survey (published here) includes 4541 galaxies; 4405 are new redshifts measured with the Hectospec on the MMT. Among the weak lensing peaks with a signal-to-noise greater that 4.25, 2/3 correspond to individual massive systems; this result is essentially identical to the Geller et al. (2010) test of the Deep Lens Survey field F2. The Subaru map, based on images in substantially better seeing than the DLS, enables detection of less massive halos at fixed redshift as expected. We demonstrate that the procedure adopted by Miyazaki et al. (2007) for removing some contaminated peaks from the weak lensing map improves agreement between the lensing map and the redshift survey in the identification of candidate massive systems.Comment: Astrophysical Journal accepted versio

    COMPASS: a 2.6m telescope for CMBR polarization studies

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    COMPASS (COsmic Microwave Polarization at Small Scale) is an experiment devoted to measuring the polarization of the CMBR. Its design and characteristics are presented
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