42 research outputs found

    Mock data sets for the Eboss and DESI Lyman-α\alpha forest surveys

    No full text
    International audience{We present a publicly-available code to generate mock Lyman-α\alpha (\lya) forest data sets. The code is based on the Fluctuating Gunn-Peterson Approximation (FGPA) applied to Gaussian random fields and on the use of fast Fourier transforms (FFT). The output includes spectra of lya transmitted flux fraction, FF, a quasar catalog, and a catalog of high-column-density systems. While these three elements have realistic correlations, additional code is then used to generate realistic quasar spectra, to add absorption by high-column-density systems and metals, and to simulate instrumental effects. Redshift space distortions (RSD) are implemented by including the large-scale velocity-gradient field in the FGPA resulting in a correlation function of FF that can be accurately predicted. One hundred realizations have been produced over the 14,000 deg2^2 Dark Energy Spectroscopy Instrument (DESI) survey footprint with 100 quasars per deg2^{2}, and they are being used for the Extended Baryon Oscillation Survey (eBOSS) and DESI surveys. The analysis of these realizations shows that the correlation of FF follows the prediction within the accuracy of eBOSS survey. The most time-consuming part of the production occurs before application of the FGPA, and the existing pre-FGPA forests can be used to easily produce new mock sets with modified redshift-dependent bias parameters or observational conditions.

    Mock data sets for the Eboss and DESI Lyman-α\alpha forest surveys

    No full text
    International audience{We present a publicly-available code to generate mock Lyman-α\alpha (\lya) forest data sets. The code is based on the Fluctuating Gunn-Peterson Approximation (FGPA) applied to Gaussian random fields and on the use of fast Fourier transforms (FFT). The output includes spectra of lya transmitted flux fraction, FF, a quasar catalog, and a catalog of high-column-density systems. While these three elements have realistic correlations, additional code is then used to generate realistic quasar spectra, to add absorption by high-column-density systems and metals, and to simulate instrumental effects. Redshift space distortions (RSD) are implemented by including the large-scale velocity-gradient field in the FGPA resulting in a correlation function of FF that can be accurately predicted. One hundred realizations have been produced over the 14,000 deg2^2 Dark Energy Spectroscopy Instrument (DESI) survey footprint with 100 quasars per deg2^{2}, and they are being used for the Extended Baryon Oscillation Survey (eBOSS) and DESI surveys. The analysis of these realizations shows that the correlation of FF follows the prediction within the accuracy of eBOSS survey. The most time-consuming part of the production occurs before application of the FGPA, and the existing pre-FGPA forests can be used to easily produce new mock sets with modified redshift-dependent bias parameters or observational conditions.

    Mock data sets for the Eboss and DESI Lyman-α\alpha forest surveys

    No full text
    International audience{We present a publicly-available code to generate mock Lyman-α\alpha (\lya) forest data sets. The code is based on the Fluctuating Gunn-Peterson Approximation (FGPA) applied to Gaussian random fields and on the use of fast Fourier transforms (FFT). The output includes spectra of lya transmitted flux fraction, FF, a quasar catalog, and a catalog of high-column-density systems. While these three elements have realistic correlations, additional code is then used to generate realistic quasar spectra, to add absorption by high-column-density systems and metals, and to simulate instrumental effects. Redshift space distortions (RSD) are implemented by including the large-scale velocity-gradient field in the FGPA resulting in a correlation function of FF that can be accurately predicted. One hundred realizations have been produced over the 14,000 deg2^2 Dark Energy Spectroscopy Instrument (DESI) survey footprint with 100 quasars per deg2^{2}, and they are being used for the Extended Baryon Oscillation Survey (eBOSS) and DESI surveys. The analysis of these realizations shows that the correlation of FF follows the prediction within the accuracy of eBOSS survey. The most time-consuming part of the production occurs before application of the FGPA, and the existing pre-FGPA forests can be used to easily produce new mock sets with modified redshift-dependent bias parameters or observational conditions.

    Broad Absorption Line Quasars in the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument Early Data Release

    No full text
    International audienceBroad absorption line (BAL) quasars are characterized by gas clouds that absorb flux at the wavelength of common quasar spectral features, although blueshifted by velocities that can exceed 0.1c. BAL features are interesting as signatures of significant feedback, yet they can also compromise cosmological studies with quasars through their impact on accurate redshifts and measurements of the matter density distribution traced by the Lyman-alpha forest. The presence of BALs can also significantly contaminate the shape of the most prominent quasar emission lines and introduce systematic shifts in quasar redshifts. We present a catalog of BAL quasars discovered in the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) survey Early Data Release, which were observed as part of DESI Survey Validation, as well as the first two months of the main survey. We describe our method to automatically identify BAL quasars in DESI data, the quantities we measure for each BAL, and investigate the completeness and purity of this method with mock DESI observations. We mask the wavelengths of the BAL features and recompute the quasar redshifts, and find the new redshifts differ by 243 km/s on average for the BAL quasar sample. These new, more accurate redshifts are important to obtain the best measurements of quasar clustering, especially at small scales. Finally, we present some spectra of rarer classes of BALs that illustrate the potential of DESI data to identify such populations for further study

    Broad Absorption Line Quasars in the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument Early Data Release

    No full text
    International audienceBroad absorption line (BAL) quasars are characterized by gas clouds that absorb flux at the wavelength of common quasar spectral features, although blueshifted by velocities that can exceed 0.1c. BAL features are interesting as signatures of significant feedback, yet they can also compromise cosmological studies with quasars through their impact on accurate redshifts and measurements of the matter density distribution traced by the Lyman-alpha forest. The presence of BALs can also significantly contaminate the shape of the most prominent quasar emission lines and introduce systematic shifts in quasar redshifts. We present a catalog of BAL quasars discovered in the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) survey Early Data Release, which were observed as part of DESI Survey Validation, as well as the first two months of the main survey. We describe our method to automatically identify BAL quasars in DESI data, the quantities we measure for each BAL, and investigate the completeness and purity of this method with mock DESI observations. We mask the wavelengths of the BAL features and recompute the quasar redshifts, and find the new redshifts differ by 243 km/s on average for the BAL quasar sample. These new, more accurate redshifts are important to obtain the best measurements of quasar clustering, especially at small scales. Finally, we present some spectra of rarer classes of BALs that illustrate the potential of DESI data to identify such populations for further study

    Broad Absorption Line Quasars in the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument Early Data Release

    No full text
    International audienceBroad absorption line (BAL) quasars are characterized by gas clouds that absorb flux at the wavelength of common quasar spectral features, although blueshifted by velocities that can exceed 0.1c. BAL features are interesting as signatures of significant feedback, yet they can also compromise cosmological studies with quasars through their impact on accurate redshifts and measurements of the matter density distribution traced by the Lyman-alpha forest. The presence of BALs can also significantly contaminate the shape of the most prominent quasar emission lines and introduce systematic shifts in quasar redshifts. We present a catalog of BAL quasars discovered in the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) survey Early Data Release, which were observed as part of DESI Survey Validation, as well as the first two months of the main survey. We describe our method to automatically identify BAL quasars in DESI data, the quantities we measure for each BAL, and investigate the completeness and purity of this method with mock DESI observations. We mask the wavelengths of the BAL features and recompute the quasar redshifts, and find the new redshifts differ by 243 km/s on average for the BAL quasar sample. These new, more accurate redshifts are important to obtain the best measurements of quasar clustering, especially at small scales. Finally, we present some spectra of rarer classes of BALs that illustrate the potential of DESI data to identify such populations for further study

    New measurements of the Lyman-α\alpha forest continuum and effective optical depth with LyCAN and DESI Y1 data

    No full text
    International audienceWe present the Lyman-α\alpha Continuum Analysis Network (LyCAN), a Convolutional Neural Network that predicts the unabsorbed quasar continuum within the rest-frame wavelength range of 1040−16001040-1600 Angstroms based on the red side of the Lyman-α\alpha emission line (1216−16001216-1600 Angstroms). We developed synthetic spectra based on a Gaussian Mixture Model representation of Nonnegative Matrix Factorization (NMF) coefficients. These coefficients were derived from high-resolution, low-redshift (z<0.2z<0.2) Hubble Space Telescope/Cosmic Origins Spectrograph quasar spectra. We supplemented this COS-based synthetic sample with an equal number of DESI Year 5 mock spectra. LyCAN performs extremely well on testing sets, achieving a median error in the forest region of 1.5% on the DESI mock sample, 2.0% on the COS-based synthetic sample, and 4.1% on the original COS spectra. LyCAN outperforms Principal Component Analysis (PCA)- and NMF-based prediction methods using the same training set by a factor of two or more. We predict the intrinsic continua of 83,635 DESI Year 1 spectra in the redshift range of 2.1≀z≀4.22.1 \leq z \leq 4.2 and perform an absolute measurement of the evolution of the effective optical depth. This is the largest sample employed to measure the optical depth evolution to date. We fit a power-law of the form τ(z)=τ0(1+z)Îł\tau(z) = \tau_0 (1+z)^\gamma to our measurements and find τ0=(2.46±0.14)×10−3\tau_0 = (2.46 \pm 0.14)\times10^{-3} and Îł=3.62±0.04\gamma = 3.62 \pm 0.04. Our results show particular agreement with high-resolution, ground-based observations around z=2z = 2, indicating that LyCAN is able to predict the quasar continuum in the forest region with only spectral information outside the forest

    Validation of the DESI 2024 Lyman Alpha Forest BAL Masking Strategy

    No full text
    International audienceBroad absorption line quasars (BALs) exhibit blueshifted absorption relative to a number of their prominent broad emission features. These absorption features can contribute to quasar redshift errors and add absorption to the Lyman-alpha (LyA) forest that is unrelated to large-scale structure. We present a detailed analysis of the impact of BALs on the Baryon Acoustic Oscillation (BAO) results with the LyA forest from the first year of data from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI). The baseline strategy for the first year analysis is to mask all pixels associated with all BAL absorption features that fall within the wavelength region used to measure the forest. We explore a range of alternate masking strategies and demonstrate that these changes have minimal impact on the BAO measurements with both DESI data and synthetic data. This includes when we mask the BAL features associated with emission lines outside of the forest region to minimize their contribution to redshift errors. We identify differences in the properties of BALs in the synthetic datasets relative to the observational data, as well as use the synthetic observations to characterize the completeness of the BAL identification algorithm, and demonstrate that incompleteness and differences in the BALs between real and synthetic data also do not impact the BAO results for the LyA forest

    3D Correlations in the Lyman-α\alpha Forest from Early DESI Data

    No full text
    International audienceWe present the first measurements of Lyman-α\alpha (Lyα\alpha) forest correlations using early data from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI). We measure the auto-correlation of Lyα\alpha absorption using 88,509 quasars at z>2z>2, and its cross-correlation with quasars using a further 147,899 tracer quasars at z≳1.77z\gtrsim1.77. Then, we fit these correlations using a 13-parameter model based on linear perturbation theory and find that it provides a good description of the data across a broad range of scales. We detect the BAO peak with a signal-to-noise ratio of 3.8σ3.8\sigma, and show that our measurements of the auto- and cross-correlations are fully-consistent with previous measurements by the Extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (eBOSS). Even though we only use here a small fraction of the final DESI dataset, our uncertainties are only a factor of 1.7 larger than those from the final eBOSS measurement. We validate the existing analysis methods of Lyα\alpha correlations in preparation for making a robust measurement of the BAO scale with the first year of DESI data

    3D Correlations in the Lyman-α\alpha Forest from Early DESI Data

    No full text
    International audienceWe present the first measurements of Lyman-α\alpha (Lyα\alpha) forest correlations using early data from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI). We measure the auto-correlation of Lyα\alpha absorption using 88,509 quasars at z>2z>2, and its cross-correlation with quasars using a further 147,899 tracer quasars at z≳1.77z\gtrsim1.77. Then, we fit these correlations using a 13-parameter model based on linear perturbation theory and find that it provides a good description of the data across a broad range of scales. We detect the BAO peak with a signal-to-noise ratio of 3.8σ3.8\sigma, and show that our measurements of the auto- and cross-correlations are fully-consistent with previous measurements by the Extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (eBOSS). Even though we only use here a small fraction of the final DESI dataset, our uncertainties are only a factor of 1.7 larger than those from the final eBOSS measurement. We validate the existing analysis methods of Lyα\alpha correlations in preparation for making a robust measurement of the BAO scale with the first year of DESI data
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