1,760 research outputs found
Objective Classification of Galaxy Spectra using the Information Bottleneck Method
A new method for classification of galaxy spectra is presented, based on a
recently introduced information theoretical principle, the `Information
Bottleneck'. For any desired number of classes, galaxies are classified such
that the information content about the spectra is maximally preserved. The
result is classes of galaxies with similar spectra, where the similarity is
determined via a measure of information. We apply our method to approximately
6000 galaxy spectra from the ongoing 2dF redshift survey, and a mock-2dF
catalogue produced by a Cold Dark Matter-based semi-analytic model of galaxy
formation. We find a good match between the mean spectra of the classes found
in the data and in the models. For the mock catalogue, we find that the classes
produced by our algorithm form an intuitively sensible sequence in terms of
physical properties such as colour, star formation activity, morphology, and
internal velocity dispersion. We also show the correlation of the classes with
the projections resulting from a Principal Component Analysis.Comment: submitted to MNRAS, 17 pages, Latex, with 14 figures embedde
ANNz: estimating photometric redshifts using artificial neural networks
We introduce ANNz, a freely available software package for photometric
redshift estimation using Artificial Neural Networks. ANNz learns the relation
between photometry and redshift from an appropriate training set of galaxies
for which the redshift is already known. Where a large and representative
training set is available ANNz is a highly competitive tool when compared with
traditional template-fitting methods.
The ANNz package is demonstrated on the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release
1, and for this particular data set the r.m.s. redshift error in the range 0 <
z < 0.7 is 0.023. Non-ideal conditions (spectroscopic sets which are small, or
which are brighter than the photometric set for which redshifts are required)
are simulated and the impact on the photometric redshift accuracy assessed.Comment: 6 pages, 6 figures. Replaced to match version accepted by PASP (minor
changes to original submission). The ANNz package may be obtained from
http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/~aa
Faint Blue Galaxies as a Probe of the X-ray Background at High Redshift
We present a formalism describing the physical content of cross-correlation
functions between a diffuse background and a population of discrete sources.
The formalism is used to interpret cross-correlation signals between the
unresolved X-ray background and a galaxy population resolved to high redshift
in another spectral band. Specifically, we apply it to the so-called faint blue
galaxy population and constrain their X-ray emissivity and clustering
properties. A model is presented which satisfies the recently measured
constraints on all 3 correlation functions (galaxy/galaxy,
background/background and galaxy/background). This model predicts that faint
galaxies in the magnitude range B=18-23 (cvering redshifts z \lsim 0.5) make
up of the X-ray background in the 0.5-2 keV band. At the mean
redshift of the galaxy sample, , the comoving volume emissivity is
ergs sMpc . When extrapolated
to fainter magnitudes, the faint blue galaxy population can account for most of
the residual background at soft energy. We show how the measurement of the
angular and zero-lag cross-correlation functions between increasingly faint
galaxies and the X-ray background can allow us to map the X-ray emissivity as a
function of redshift.Comment: uuencoded compressed postscript, without figures. The preprint is
available with figures at http://www.ast.cam.ac.uk/preprint/PrePrint.htm
The Signature of Proper Motion in the Microwave Sky
The cosmic microwave background radiation defines a preferred cosmic rest
frame, and inflationary cosmological theories predict that the microwave
background temperature fluctuations should be statistically isotropic in this
rest frame. For observers moving with respect to the rest frame, the
temperature fluctuations will no longer be isotropic, due to the preferred
direction of motion. The most prominent effect is a dipole temperature
variation, which has long been observed with an amplitude of a part in a
thousand of the mean temperature. An observer's velocity with respect to the
rest frame will also induce changes in the angular correlation function and
creation of non-zero off-diagonal correlations between multipole moments. We
calculate both of these effects, which are part-in-a-thousand corrections to
the rest frame power spectrum and correlation function. Both should be
detectable in future full-sky microwave maps from the Planck satellite. These
signals will constrain cosmological models in which the cosmic dipole arises
partly from large-scale isocurvature perturbations, as suggested by recent
observations.Comment: 5 pages, no figures. Submitted to Physical Review Letter
Do galactic potential wells depend on their environment?
Using galaxies in complete samples as tracers of the galaxy density field and about 1000 galaxies with measured circular velocities as targets, we examine the cross-correlation functions between the targets and tracers as a function of galaxy circular velocities. The correlation strength does not vary with the circular velocities except for elliptical galaxies with the highest velocity dispersions, where the effect may well be due to morphological segregations in clusters of galaxies. This is contrasted with the strong dependence of the correlation functions of dark halos on their circular velocities in some models of galaxy formation
Dark Energy: is it ‘just’ Einstein's Cosmological Constant Λ?
The Cosmological Constant Lambda, a concept introduced by Einstein in 1917, has been with us ever since in different variants and incarnations, including the broader concept of Dark Energy. Current observations are consistent with a value of Lambda corresponding to about present-epoch 70% of the critical density of the Universe. This is causing the speeding up (acceleration) of the expansion of the Universe over the past 6 billion years, a discovery recognised by the 2011 Nobel Prize in Physics. Coupled with the flatness of the Universe and the amount of 30% matter (5% baryonic and 25% Cold Dark Matter), this forms the so-called Lambda-CDM standard model, which has survived many observational tests over about 30 years. However, there are currently indications of inconsistencies (`tensions' ) within Lambda-CDM on different values of the Hubble Constant and the clumpiness factor. Also, time variation of Dark Energy and slight deviations from General Relativity are not ruled out yet. Several grand projects are underway to test Lambda-CDM further and to estimate the cosmological parameters to sub-percent level. If Lambda-CDM will remain the standard model, then the ball is back in the theoreticians' court, to explain the physical meaning of Lambda. Is Lambda an alteration to the geometry of the Universe, or the energy of the vacuum? Or maybe it is something different, that manifests a yet unknown higher-level theory
100 years of the Cosmological Constant: what's next?
The Cosmological Constant Λ , in different incarnations, has been with us for 100 years. Many surveys of dark energy are underway, indicating so far that the data are consistent with a dark energy equation of state of w=−1 , i.e. a Λ term in Einstein’s equation, although time variation of w is not yet ruled out. The ball is now back in the theoreticians’ court, to explain the physical meaning of Λ . We discuss sociological aspects of this field, in particular to what extent the agreement on the cold dark matter + Λ concordance model is a result of the globalization of research over-communication
The correlation function of radio sources
We investigate the large-scale clustering of radio sources in the Green Bank
and Parkes-MIT-NRAO 4.85 GHz surveys by measuring the angular two-point
correlation function w(\theta). Excluding contaminated areas, the two surveys
together cover 70 per cent of the whole sky. We find both surveys to be
reasonably complete above 50 mJy. On the basis of previous studies, the radio
sources are galaxies and radio-loud quasars lying at redshifts up to z \sim 4,
with a median redshift z \sim 1. This provides the opportunity to probe
large-scale structures in a volume far larger than that within the reach of
present optical and infrared surveys. We detect a clustering signal w(\theta)
\approx 0.01 for \theta = 1\degr. By assuming an evolving power-law spatial
correlation function in comoving coordinates \xi(r_c,z) = ( r_c / r_0
)^{-\gamma} (1+z)^{\gamma-(3+\epsilon)}, where \gamma = 1.8, and the redshift
distribution N(z) of the radio galaxies, we constrain the r_0--\epsilon
parameter space. For `stable clustering' (\epsilon = 0), we find the
correlation length r_0 \approx 18 Mpc/h, larger than the value for nearby
normal galaxies and comparable to the cluster-cluster correlation length.Comment: 8 pages, 7 ps figures included, LaTeX (mn,sty). Accepted by MNRA
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