777 research outputs found
Magnetic frustration in a stoichiometric spin-chain compound, CaCoIrO
The temperature dependent ac and dc magnetization and heat capacity data of
CaCoIrO, a spin-chain compound crystallizing in a KCdCl-derived
rhombohedral structure, show the features due to magnetic ordering of a
frustrated-type below about 30 K, however without exhibiting the signatures of
the so-called "partially disordered antiferromagnetic structure" encountered in
the isostructural compounds, CaCoO and CaCoRhO. This class
of compounds thus provides a variety for probing the consequences of magnetic
frustration due to topological reasons in stoichiometric spin-chain materials,
presumably arising from subtle differences in the interchain and intrachain
magnetic coupling strengths. This compound presents additional interesting
situations in the sense that, ac susceptibility exhibits a large frequency
dependence in the vicinity of 30 K uncharacteristic of conventional
spin-glasses, with this frustrated magnetic state being robust to the
application of external magnetic fields.Comment: Physical Review (Rapid Communications), in pres
Long range magnetic ordering in a spin-chain compound, CaCuMnO, with multiple bond distances
The results of ac and dc magnetization and heat capacity measurements as a
function of temperature (T = 1.8 to 300 K) are reported for a
quasi-one-dimensional compound, CaCuMnO, crystallizing in a
triclinically distorted KCdCl-type structure. The results reveal that
this compound undergoes antiferromagnetic ordering close to 5.5 K. In addition,
there is another magnetic transition below 3.6 K. Existence of two long-range
magnetic transitions is uncommon among quasi-one-dimensional systems. It is
interesting to note that both the magnetic transitions are of long-range type,
instead of spin-glass type, in spite of the fact that the Cu-O and Mn-O bond
distances are multiplied due to this crystallographic distortion. In view of
this, this compound could serve as a nice example for studying
"order-in-disorder" phenomena.Comment: Physical Review (in press
Wide-field LOFAR-LBA power-spectra analyses: Impact of calibration, polarization leakage and ionosphere
Contamination due to foregrounds (Galactic and Extra-galactic), calibration
errors and ionospheric effects pose major challenges in detection of the cosmic
21 cm signal in various Epoch of Reionization (EoR) experiments. We present the
results of a pilot study of a field centered on 3C196 using LOFAR Low Band
(56-70 MHz) observations, where we quantify various wide field and calibration
effects such as gain errors, polarized foregrounds, and ionospheric effects. We
observe a `pitchfork' structure in the 2D power spectrum of the polarized
intensity in delay-baseline space, which leaks into the modes beyond the
instrumental horizon (EoR/CD window). We show that this structure largely
arises due to strong instrumental polarization leakage () towards
{Cas\,A} ( kJy at 81 MHz, brightest source in northern sky), which is
far away from primary field of view. We measure an extremely small ionospheric
diffractive scale ( m at 60 MHz) towards {Cas\,A}
resembling pure Kolmogorov turbulence compared to
km towards zenith at 150 MHz for typical ionospheric conditions. This is one of
the smallest diffractive scales ever measured at these frequencies. Our work
provides insights in understanding the nature of aforementioned effects and
mitigating them in future Cosmic Dawn observations (e.g. with SKA-low and HERA)
in the same frequency window.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Primary beam effects of radio astronomy antennas -- II. Modelling the MeerKAT L-band beam
After a decade of design and construction, South Africa's SKA-MID precursor
MeerKAT has begun its science operations. To make full use of the widefield
capability of the array, it is imperative that we have an accurate model of the
primary beam of its antennas. We have taken available L-band full-polarization
'astro-holographic' observations of three antennas and a generic
electromagnetic simulation and created sparse representations of the beams
using principal components and Zernike polynomials. The spectral behaviour of
the spatial coefficients has been modelled using discrete cosine transform. We
have provided the Zernike-based model over a diameter of 10 deg averaged over
the beams of three antennas in an associated software tool (EIDOS) that can be
useful in direction-dependent calibration and imaging. The model is more
accurate for the diagonal elements of the beam Jones matrix and at lower
frequencies. As we get more accurate beam measurements and simulations in the
future, especially for the cross-polarization patterns, our pipeline can be
used to create more accurate sparse representations of MeerKAT beams.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures. This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF
of an article accepted for publication in MNRAS following peer review. The
version of record [K. M. B. Asad et al., 2021] is available online at:
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stab10
Mining Mini-Halos with MeerKAT I. Calibration and Imaging
Radio mini-halos are clouds of diffuse, low surface brightness synchrotron
emission that surround the Brightest Cluster Galaxy (BCG) in massive cool-core
galaxy clusters. In this paper, we use third generation calibration (3GC), also
called direction-dependent (DD) calibration, and point source subtraction on
MeerKAT extragalactic continuum data. We calibrate and image archival MeerKAT
L-band observations of a sample of five galaxy clusters (ACO 1413, ACO 1795,
ACO 3444, MACS J1115.8+0129, MACS J2140.2-2339). We use the CARACal pipeline
for direction-independent (DI) calibration, DDFacet and killMS for 3GC,
followed by visibility-plane point source subtraction to image the underlying
mini-halo without bias from any embedded sources. Our 3GC process shows a
drastic improvement in artefact removal, to the extent that the local noise
around severely affected sources was halved and ultimately resulted in a 7\%
improvement in global image noise. Thereafter, using these spectrally
deconvolved Stokes I continuum images, we directly measure for four mini-halos
the flux density, radio power, size and in-band integrated spectra. Further to
that, we show the in-band spectral index maps of the mini-halo (with point
sources). We present a new mini-halo detection hosted by MACS J2140.2-2339,
having flux density mJy, average diameter
296 kpc and . We also found
a 100 kpc southern extension to the ACO 3444 mini-halo which was not
detected in previous VLA L-band observations. Our description of MeerKAT
wide-field, wide-band data reduction will be instructive for conducting further
mini-halo science.Comment: 16 pages. 10 figure
Morphological Classification of Radio Galaxies using Semi-Supervised Group Equivariant CNNs
Out of the estimated few trillion galaxies, only around a million have been
detected through radio frequencies, and only a tiny fraction, approximately a
thousand, have been manually classified. We have addressed this disparity
between labeled and unlabeled images of radio galaxies by employing a
semi-supervised learning approach to classify them into the known
Fanaroff-Riley Type I (FRI) and Type II (FRII) categories. A Group Equivariant
Convolutional Neural Network (G-CNN) was used as an encoder of the
state-of-the-art self-supervised methods SimCLR (A Simple Framework for
Contrastive Learning of Visual Representations) and BYOL (Bootstrap Your Own
Latent). The G-CNN preserves the equivariance for the Euclidean Group E(2),
enabling it to effectively learn the representation of globally oriented
feature maps. After representation learning, we trained a fully-connected
classifier and fine-tuned the trained encoder with labeled data. Our findings
demonstrate that our semi-supervised approach outperforms existing
state-of-the-art methods across several metrics, including cluster quality,
convergence rate, accuracy, precision, recall, and the F1-score. Moreover,
statistical significance testing via a t-test revealed that our method
surpasses the performance of a fully supervised G-CNN. This study emphasizes
the importance of semi-supervised learning in radio galaxy classification,
where labeled data are still scarce, but the prospects for discovery are
immense.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, accepted in INNS Deep Learning Innovations and
Applications (INNS DLIA 2023) workshop, IJCNN 2023, to be published in
Procedia Computer Scienc
Polarization leakage in epoch of reionization windows – II. Primary beam model and direction-dependent calibration
Leakage of diffuse polarized emission into Stokes I caused by the polarized primary beam of the instrument might mimic the spectral structure of the 21-cm signal coming from the epoch of reionization (EoR) making their separation difficult. Therefore, understanding polarimetric performance of the antenna is crucial for a successful detection of the EoR signal. Here, we have calculated the accuracy of the nominal model beam of Low Frequency ARray (LOFAR) in predicting the leakage from Stokes I to Q, U by comparing them with the corresponding leakage of compact sources actually observed in the 3C 295 field. We have found that the model beam has errors of ≤10 per cent on the predicted levels of leakage of ∼1 per cent within the field of view, i.e. if the leakage is taken out perfectly using this model the leakage will reduce to 10−3 of the Stokes I flux. If similar levels of accuracy can be obtained in removing leakage from Stokes Q, U to I, we can say, based on the results of our previous paper, that the removal of this leakage using this beam model would ensure that the leakage is well below the expected EoR signal in almost the whole instrumental k-space of the cylindrical power spectrum. We have also shown here that direction-dependent calibration can remove instrumentally polarized compact sources, given an unpolarized sky model, very close to the local noise level
Magnetic anomalies in the spin chain system, SrCuZnIrO
We report the results of ac and dc magnetization (M) and heat-capacity (C)
measurements on the solid solution, SrCuZnIrO. While the Zn
end member is known to form in a rhombohedral pseudo one-dimensional
KCdCl structure with an antiferromagnetic ordering temperature of
(T =) 19 K, the Cu end member has been reported to form in a monoclinically
distorted form with a Curie temperature of (T =) 19 K. The magnetism of the
Zn compound is found to be robust to synthetic conditions and is broadly
consistent with the behavior known in the literature. However, we find a lower
magnetic ordering temperature (T) for our Cu compound (~ 13 K), thereby
suggesting that T is sensitive to synthetic conditions. The Cu sample
appears to be in a spin-glass-like state at low temperatures, judged by a
frequency dependence of ac magnetic susceptibility and a broadening of the C
anomaly at the onset of magnetic ordering, in sharp contrast to earlier
proposals. Small applications of magnetic field, however, drive this system to
ferromagnetism as inferred from the M data. Small substitutions for Cu/Zn (x =
0.75 or 0.25) significantly depress magnetic ordering; in other words, T
varies non-monotonically with x (T ~ 6, 3 and 4 K for x = 0.25, 0.5, and
0.67 respectively). The plot of inverse susceptibility versus temperature is
non-linear in the paramagnetic state as if correlations within (or among) the
magnetic chains continuously vary with temperature. The results establishComment: 7 pages, 7 figures, Revte
- …