554 research outputs found
AGAPE, an experiment to detect MACHO's in the direction of the Andromeda galaxy
The status of the Agape experiment to detect Machos in the direction of the
andromeda galaxy is presented.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure in a separate compressed, tarred, uuencoded uufile.
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Microlensing towards M31 with MDM data
We report the final analysis of a search for microlensing events in the
direction of the Andromeda galaxy, which aimed to probe the MACHO composition
of the M31 halo using data collected during the 1998-99 observational campaign
at the MDM observatory. In a previous paper, we discussed the results from a
first set of observations. Here, we deal with the complete data set, and we
take advantage of some INT observations in the 1999-2000 seasons. This merging
of data sets taken by different instruments turns out to be very useful, the
study of the longer baseline available allowing us to test the uniqueness
characteristic of microlensing events. As a result, all the candidate
microlensing events previously reported turn out to be variable stars. We
further discuss a selection based on different criteria, aimed at the detection
of short--duration events. We find three candidates whose positions are
consistent with self--lensing events, although the available data do not allow
us to conclude unambiguously that they are due to microlensing.Comment: Accepted for publication in Astronomy and Astrophysic
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Impact of particles on the Planck HFI detectors: Ground-based measurements and physical interpretation
The Planck High Frequency Instrument (HFI) surveyed the sky continuously from
August 2009 to January 2012. Its noise and sensitivity performance were
excellent, but the rate of cosmic ray impacts on the HFI detectors was
unexpectedly high. Furthermore, collisions of cosmic rays with the focal plane
produced transient signals in the data (glitches) with a wide range of
characteristics. A study of cosmic ray impacts on the HFI detector modules has
been undertaken to categorize and characterize the glitches, to correct the HFI
time-ordered data, and understand the residual effects on Planck maps and data
products. This paper presents an evaluation of the physical origins of glitches
observed by the HFI detectors. In order to better understand the glitches
observed by HFI in flight, several ground-based experiments were conducted with
flight-spare HFI bolometer modules. The experiments were conducted between 2010
and 2013 with HFI test bolometers in different configurations using varying
particles and impact energies. The bolometer modules were exposed to 23 MeV
protons from the Orsay IPN TANDEM accelerator, and to Am and Cm
-particle and Fe radioactive X-ray sources. The calibration data
from the HFI ground-based preflight tests were used to further characterize the
glitches and compare glitch rates with statistical expectations under
laboratory conditions. Test results provide strong evidence that the dominant
family of glitches observed in flight are due to cosmic ray absorption by the
silicon die substrate on which the HFI detectors reside. Glitch energy is
propagated to the thermistor by ballistic phonons, while there is also a
thermal diffusion contribution. The implications of these results for future
satellite missions, especially those in the far-infrared to sub-millimetre and
millimetre regions of the electromagnetic spectrum, are discussed.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figure
Identification of 13 Cepheids and 333 Other Variables in M31
We present Cousins and band photometry of variable stars in a
region in the disk of M31 galaxy, obtained during 141
nights. Of the 26 Cepheid variables present in the region, two are newly
discovered, 11 are classified as Cepheids for the first time and 13 are
confirmed as Cepheids. The extensive photometry of these Cepheids enabled us to
determine precise phase and amplitude of pulsation which ranges from 0.11 to
0.48 mag in band. The period of variability ranges from 7.5 to 56
days. The period-luminosity diagram is used to derive a distance modulus of
24.490.11 mag for M31 galaxy. We also report variability in 333 other
stars, of them, 115 stars appear to be long period variables, 2 suspected
eclipsing binaries and remaining 216 are irregular variables.Comment: Accepted for publication in A&A, 9 figures, the paper and figures
with better resolution can be downloaded from
http://cdfinfo.in2p3.fr/Downloads/cosmobs/yogesh/paper
Disentangling serology to elucidate henipa- and filovirus transmission in Madagascar fruit bats.
Bats are reservoirs for emerging human pathogens, including Hendra and Nipah henipaviruses and Ebola and Marburg filoviruses. These viruses demonstrate predictable patterns in seasonality and age structure across multiple systems; previous work suggests that they may circulate in Madagascar's endemic fruit bats, which are widely consumed as human food. We aimed to (a) document the extent of henipa- and filovirus exposure among Malagasy fruit bats, (b) explore seasonality in seroprevalence and serostatus in these bat populations and (c) compare mechanistic hypotheses for possible transmission dynamics underlying these data. To this end, we amassed and analysed a unique dataset documenting longitudinal serological henipa- and filovirus dynamics in three Madagascar fruit bat species. We uncovered serological evidence of exposure to Hendra-/Nipah-related henipaviruses in Eidolon dupreanum, Pteropus rufus and Rousettus madagascariensis, to Cedar-related henipaviruses in E. dupreanum and R. madagascariensis and to Ebola-related filoviruses in P. rufus and R. madagascariensis. We demonstrated significant seasonality in population-level seroprevalence and individual serostatus for multiple viruses across these species, linked to the female reproductive calendar. An age-structured subset of the data highlighted evidence of waning maternal antibodies in neonates, increasing seroprevalence in young and decreasing seroprevalence late in life. Comparison of mechanistic epidemiological models fit to these data offered support for transmission hypotheses permitting waning antibodies but retained immunity in adult-age bats. Our findings suggest that bats may seasonally modulate mechanisms of pathogen control, with consequences for population-level transmission. Additionally, we narrow the field of candidate transmission hypotheses by which bats are presumed to host and transmit potentially zoonotic viruses globally.National Geographic Society (Young Explorerâs and Waitt grants to CEB)
PIVOT (research grant to CEB)
National Science Foundation (Dissertation Improvement Grant and Graduate Research Fellowship to CEB)
Princeton University (Walbridge Research Fund Grant to CEB; Center for Health and Well-being Grant to CJM) a
Biological Defense Research Directorate of the Naval Medical Research Center and the Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health (research grant AI054715 to CCB)
Queensland Government Accelerate Postdoctoral Research Fellowship to AJP
The Alborada Trust (JLNW
QUBIC: The QU Bolometric Interferometer for Cosmology
One of the major challenges of modern cosmology is the detection of B-mode
polarization anisotropies in the CMB. These originate from tensor fluctuations
of the metric produced during the inflationary phase. Their detection would
therefore constitute a major step towards understanding the primordial
Universe. The expected level of these anisotropies is however so small that it
requires a new generation of instruments with high sensitivity and extremely
good control of systematic effects. We propose the QUBIC instrument based on
the novel concept of bolometric interferometry, bringing together the
sensitivity advantages of bolometric detectors with the systematics effects
advantages of interferometry. Methods: The instrument will directly observe the
sky through an array of entry horns whose signals will be combined together
using an optical combiner. The whole set-up is located inside a cryostat.
Polarization modulation will be achieved using a rotating half-wave plate and
interference fringes will be imaged on two focal planes (separated by a
polarizing grid) tiled with bolometers. We show that QUBIC can be considered as
a synthetic imager, exactly similar to a usual imager but with a synthesized
beam formed by the array of entry horns. Scanning the sky provides an
additional modulation of the signal and improve the sky coverage shape. The
usual techniques of map-making and power spectrum estimation can then be
applied. We show that the sensitivity of such an instrument is comparable with
that of an imager with the same number of horns. We anticipate a low level of
beam-related systematics thanks to the fact that the synthesized beam is
determined by the location of the primary horns. Other systematics should be
under good control thanks to an autocalibration technique, specific to our
concept, that will permit the accurate determination of most of the systematics
parameters.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, submitted to Astronomy and Astrophysic
The POINT-AGAPE survey II: An Unrestricted Search for Microlensing Events towards M31
An automated search is carried out for microlensing events using a catalogue
of 44554 variable superpixel lightcurves derived from our three-year monitoring
program of M31. Each step of our candidate selection is objective and
reproducible by a computer. Our search is unrestricted, in the sense that it
has no explicit timescale cut. So, it must overcome the awkward problem of
distinguishing long-timescale microlensing events from long-period stellar
variables. The basis of the selection algorithm is the fitting of the
superpixel lightcurves to two different theoretical models, using variable star
and blended microlensing templates. Only if microlensing is preferred is an
event retained as a possible candidate. Further cuts are made with regard to
(i) sampling, (ii) goodness of fit of the peak to a Paczynski curve, (iii)
consistency of the microlensing hypothesis with the absence of a resolved
source, (iv) achromaticity, (v) position in the colour-magnitude diagram and
(vi) signal-to-noise ratio. Our results are reported in terms of first-level
candidates, which are the most trustworthy, and second-level candidates, which
are possible microlensing but have lower signal-to-noise and are more
questionable. The pipeline leaves just 3 first-level candidates, all of which
have very short full-width half-maximum timescale (<5 days) and 3 second-level
candidates, which have timescales of 31, 36 and 51 days respectively. We also
show 16 third-level lightcurves, as an illustration of the events that just
fail the threshold for designation as microlensing candidates. They are almost
certainly mainly variable stars. Two of the 3 first-level candidates correspond
to known events (PA 00-S3 and PA 00-S4) already reported by the POINT-AGAPE
project. The remaining first-level candidate is new.Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, MNRAS, to appea
Classical novae from the POINT-AGAPE microlensing survey of M31 -- I. The nova catalogue
The POINT-AGAPE survey is an optical search for gravitational microlensing
events towards the Andromeda Galaxy (M31). As well as microlensing, the survey
is sensitive to many different classes of variable stars and transients. Here
we describe the automated detection and selection pipeline used to identify M31
classical novae (CNe) and we present the resulting catalogue of 20 CN
candidates observed over three seasons. CNe are observed both in the bulge
region as well as over a wide area of the M31 disk. Nine of the CNe are caught
during the final rise phase and all are well sampled in at least two colours.
The excellent light-curve coverage has allowed us to detect and classify CNe
over a wide range of speed class, from very fast to very slow. Among the
light-curves is a moderately fast CN exhibiting entry into a deep transition
minimum, followed by its final decline. We have also observed in detail a very
slow CN which faded by only 0.01 mag day over a 150 day period. We
detect other interesting variable objects, including one of the longest period
and most luminous Mira variables. The CN catalogue constitutes a uniquely
well-sampled and objectively-selected data set with which to study the
statistical properties of classical novae in M31, such as the global nova rate,
the reliability of novae as standard-candle distance indicators and the
dependence of the nova population on stellar environment. The findings of this
statistical study will be reported in a follow-up paper.Comment: 21 pages, 13 figures, re-submitted for publication in MNRAS, typos
corrected, references updated, figures 5-9 made cleare
First Detection of Polarization of the Submillimetre Diffuse Galactic Dust Emission by Archeops
We present the first determination of the Galactic polarized emission at 353
GHz by Archeops. The data were taken during the Arctic night of February 7,
2002 after the balloon--borne instrument was launched by CNES from the Swedish
Esrange base near Kiruna. In addition to the 143 GHz and 217 GHz frequency
bands dedicated to CMB studies, Archeops had one 545 GHz and six 353 GHz
bolometers mounted in three polarization sensitive pairs that were used for
Galactic foreground studies. We present maps of the I, Q, U Stokes parameters
over 17% of the sky and with a 13 arcmin resolution at 353 GHz (850 microns).
They show a significant Galactic large scale polarized emission coherent on the
longitude ranges [100, 120] and [180, 200] deg. with a degree of polarization
at the level of 4-5%, in agreement with expectations from starlight
polarization measurements. Some regions in the Galactic plane (Gem OB1,
Cassiopeia) show an even stronger degree of polarization in the range 10-20%.
Those findings provide strong evidence for a powerful grain alignment mechanism
throughout the interstellar medium and a coherent magnetic field coplanar to
the Galactic plane. This magnetic field pervades even some dense clouds.
Extrapolated to high Galactic latitude, these results indicate that
interstellar dust polarized emission is the major foreground for PLANCK-HFI CMB
polarization measurement.Comment: Submitted to Astron. & Astrophys., 14 pages, 12 Fig., 2 Table
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