ترغب بنشر مسار تعليمي؟ اضغط هنا

We present the largest homogeneous survey of $z>4.4$ damped Lyman-$alpha$ systems (DLAs) using the spectra of 163 QSOs that comprise the Giant Gemini GMOS (GGG) survey. With this survey we make the most precise high-redshift measurement of the cosmol ogical mass density of neutral hydrogen, $Omega_{rm HI}$. At such high redshift important systematic uncertainties in the identification of DLAs are produced by strong intergalactic medium absorption and QSO continuum placement. These can cause spurious DLA detections, result in real DLAs being missed, or bias the inferred DLA column density distribution. We correct for these effects using a combination of mock and higher-resolution spectra, and show that for the GGG DLA sample the uncertainties introduced are smaller than the statistical errors on $Omega_{rm HI}$. We find $Omega_{rm HI}=0.98^{+0.20}_{-0.18}times10^{-3}$ at $langle zrangle=4.9$, assuming a 20% contribution from lower column density systems below the DLA threshold. By comparing to literature measurements at lower redshifts, we show that $Omega_{rm HI}$ can be described by the functional form $Omega_{rm HI}(z)propto(1+z)^{0.4}$. This gradual decrease from $z=5$ to $0$ is consistent with the bulk of HI gas being a transitory phase fuelling star formation, which is continually replenished by more highly-ionized gas from the intergalactic medium, and from recycled galactic winds.
133 - J. Bagdonaite 2015
A molecular hydrogen absorber at a lookback time of 12.4 billion years, corresponding to 10$%$ of the age of the universe today, is analyzed to put a constraint on a varying proton--electron mass ratio, $mu$. A high resolution spectrum of the J1443$+ $2724 quasar, which was observed with the Very Large Telescope, is used to create an accurate model of 89 Lyman and Werner band transitions whose relative frequencies are sensitive to $mu$, yielding a limit on the relative deviation from the current laboratory value of $Deltamu/mu=(-9.5pm5.4_{textrm{stat}} pm 5.3_{textrm{sys}})times 10^{-6}$.
251 - J. B. Whitmore 2014
We present a new `supercalibration technique for measuring systematic distortions in the wavelength scales of high resolution spectrographs. By comparing spectra of `solar twin stars or asteroids with a reference laboratory solar spectrum, distortion s in the standard thorium--argon calibration can be tracked with $sim$10 m s$^{-1}$ precision over the entire optical wavelength range on scales of both echelle orders ($sim$50--100 AA) and entire spectrographs arms ($sim$1000--3000 AA). Using archival spectra from the past 20 years we have probed the supercalibration history of the VLT--UVES and Keck--HIRES spectrographs. We find that systematic errors in their wavelength scales are ubiquitous and substantial, with long-range distortions varying between typically $pm$200 m s$^{-1}$ per 1000 AA. We apply a simple model of these distortions to simulated spectra that characterize the large UVES and HIRES quasar samples which previously indicated possible evidence for cosmological variations in the fine-structure constant, $alpha$. The spurious deviations in $alpha$ produced by the model closely match important aspects of the VLT--UVES quasar results at all redshifts and partially explain the HIRES results, though not self-consistently at all redshifts. That is, the apparent ubiquity, size and general characteristics of the distortions are capable of significantly weakening the evidence for variations in $alpha$ from quasar absorption lines.
Large statistical samples of quasar spectra have previously indicated possible cosmological variations in the fine-structure constant, $alpha$. A smaller sample of higher signal-to-noise ratio spectra, with dedicated calibration, would allow a detail ed test of this evidence. Towards that end, we observed equatorial quasar HS 1549$+$1919 with three telescopes: the Very Large Telescope, Keck and, for the first time in such analyses, Subaru. By directly comparing these spectra to each other, and by `supercalibrating them using asteroid and iodine-cell tests, we detected and removed long-range distortions of the quasar spectras wavelength scales which would have caused significant systematic errors in our $alpha$ measurements. For each telescope we measure the relative deviation in $alpha$ from the current laboratory value, $Deltaalpha/alpha$, in 3 absorption systems at redshifts $z_{mathrm{abs}}=1.143$, 1.342, and 1.802. The nine measurements of $Deltaalpha/alpha$ are all consistent with zero at the 2-$sigma$ level, with 1-$sigma$ statistical (systematic) uncertainties 5.6--24 (1.8--7.0) parts per million (ppm). They are also consistent with each other at the 1-$sigma$ level, allowing us to form a combined value for each telescope and, finally, a single value for this line of sight: $Deltaalpha/alpha=-5.4 pm 3.3_{mathrm{stat}} pm 1.5_{mathrm{sys}}$ ppm, consistent with both zero and previous, large samples. We also average all Large Programme results measuring $Deltaalpha/alpha=-0.6 pm 1.9_{mathrm{stat}} pm 0.9_{mathrm{sys}}$ ppm. Our results demonstrate the robustness and reliability at the 3 ppm level afforded by supercalibration techniques and direct comparison of spectra from different telescopes.
145 - Julija Bagdonaite 2013
Rovibronic molecular hydrogen (H$_2$) transitions at redshift $z_{rm abs} simeq 2.659$ towards the background quasar B0642$-$5038 are examined for a possible cosmological variation in the proton-to-electron mass ratio, $mu$. We utilise an archival sp ectrum from the Very Large Telescope/Ultraviolet and Visual Echelle Spectrograph with a signal-to-noise ratio of $sim$35 per 2.5-km$,$s$^{-1}$ pixel at the observed H$_2$ wavelengths (335--410 nm). Some 111 H$_2$ transitions in the Lyman and Werner bands have been identified in the damped Lyman $alpha$ system for which a kinetic gas temperature of $sim$84 K and a molecular fraction $log f = -2.18pm0.08$ is determined. The H$_2$ absorption lines are included in a comprehensive fitting method, which allows us to extract a constraint on a variation of the proton-electron mass ratio, $Deltamu/mu$, from all transitions at once. We obtain $Deltamu/mu = (17.1 pm 4.5_{rm stat} pm3.7_{rm sys})times10^{-6}$. However, we find evidence that this measurement has been affected by wavelength miscalibration errors recently identified in UVES. A correction based on observations of objects with solar-like spectra gives a smaller $Deltamu/mu$ value and contributes to a larger systematic uncertainty: $Deltamu/mu = (12.7 pm 4.5_{rm stat} pm4.2_{rm sys})times10^{-6}$.
70 - N. Bouche 2013
Galaxies are thought to be fed by the continuous accretion of intergalactic gas, but direct observational evidence has been elusive. The accreted gas is expected to orbit about the galaxys halo, delivering not just fuel for star-formation but also an gular momentum to the galaxy, leading to distinct kinematic signatures. Here we report observations showing these distinct signatures near a typical distant star-forming galaxy where the gas is detected using a background quasar passing 26 kpc from the host. Our observations indicate that gas accretion plays a major role in galaxy growth since the estimated accretion rate is comparable to the star-formation rate.
We present a source catalogue of 9,040 radio sources resulting from high-resolution observations of 8,385 PMN sources with the Australia Telescope Compact Array. The catalogue lists flux density and structural measurements at 4.8 and 8.6 GHz, derived from observations of all PMN sources in the declination range -87 deg < delta < -38.5 deg (exclusive of galactic latitudes |b| < 2 deg) with flux density S4850 > 70 mJy (50 mJy south of delta = -73 deg). We assess the quality of the data, which was gathered in 1992-1994, describe the population of catalogued sources, and compare it to samples from complementary catalogues. In particular we find 127 radio sources with probable association with gamma-ray sources observed by the orbiting Fermi Large Area Telescope.
121 - Michael T. Murphy 2012
Precise astronomical spectroscopic analyses routinely assume that individual pixels in charge-coupled devices (CCDs) have uniform sensitivity to photons. Intra-pixel sensitivity (IPS) variations may already cause small systematic errors in, for examp le, studies of extra-solar planets via stellar radial velocities and cosmological variability in fundamental constants via quasar spectroscopy, but future experiments requiring velocity precisions approaching ~1 cm/s will be more strongly affected. Laser frequency combs have been shown to provide highly precise wavelength calibration for astronomical spectrographs, but here we show that they can also be used to measure IPS variations in astronomical CCDs in situ. We successfully tested a laser frequency comb system on the Ultra-High Resolution Facility spectrograph at the Anglo-Australian Telescope. By modelling the 2-dimensional comb signal recorded in a single CCD exposure, we find that the average IPS deviates by <8 per cent if it is assumed to vary symmetrically about the pixel centre. We also demonstrate that series of comb exposures with absolutely known offsets between them can yield tighter constraints on symmetric IPS variations from ~100 pixels. We discuss measurement of asymmetric IPS variations and absolute wavelength calibration of astronomical spectrographs and CCDs using frequency combs.
Molecular hydrogen (H2) absorption features observed in the line-of-sight to Q2348-011 at redshift zabs = 2.426 are analysed for the purpose of detecting a possible variation of the proton-to-electron mass ratio mu=mp/me. By its structure Q2348-011 i s the most complex analysed H2 absorption system at high redshift so far, featuring at least seven distinctly visible molecular velocity components. The multiple velocity components associated with each transition of H2 were modeled simultaneously by means of a comprehensive fitting method. The fiducial model resulted in dmu/mu = (-0.68 +/- 2.78) x 10^-5, showing no sign that mu in this particular absorber is different from its current laboratory value. Although not as tight a constraint as other absorbers have recently provided, this result is consistent with the results from all previously analysed H2-bearing sight-lines. Combining all such measurements yields a constraint of dmu/mu < 10^-5 for the redshift range z = (2--3).
We present a multi-wavelength study of the radio source G296.7-0.9. This source has a bilateral radio morphology, a radio spectral index of -0.5 +/- 0.1, sparse patches of linear polarisation, and thermal X-rays with a bright arc near the radio bound ary. Considering these characteristics, we conclude that G296.7-0.9 is a supernova remnant (SNR). The age and morphology of the SNR in the context of its environment suggest that the source is co-located with an HII region, and that portions of the shock front have broken out into a lower density medium. We see no evidence for a neutron star or pulsar wind nebula associated with SNR G296.7-0.9.
mircosoft-partner

هل ترغب بارسال اشعارات عن اخر التحديثات في شمرا-اكاديميا