42 results on '"Bolton, J. S."'
Search Results
2. WEAVE-QSO: A Massive Intergalactic Medium Survey for the William Herschel Telescope
- Author
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Pieri, M. M., Bonoli, S., Chaves-Montero, J., Paris, I., Fumagalli, M., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Noterdaeme, P., Miralda-Escudé, J., Busca, N. G., Rahmani, H., Peroux, C., Font-Ribera, A., Trager, S. C., Collaboration, The WEAVE, Pieri, M. M., Bonoli, S., Chaves-Montero, J., Paris, I., Fumagalli, M., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Noterdaeme, P., Miralda-Escudé, J., Busca, N. G., Rahmani, H., Peroux, C., Font-Ribera, A., Trager, S. C., and Collaboration, The WEAVE
- Abstract
In these proceedings we describe the WEAVE-QSO survey, which will observe around 400,000 high redshift quasars starting in 2018. This survey is part of a broader WEAVE survey to be conducted at the 4.2m William Herschel Telescope. We will focus on chiefly on the science goals, but will also briefly summarise the target selection methods anticipated and the expected survey plan. Understanding the apparent acceleration in the expansion of the Universe is one of the key scientific challenges of our time. Many experiments have been proposed to study this expansion, using a variety of techniques. Here we describe a survey that can measure this acceleration and therefore help elucidate the nature of dark energy: a survey of the Lyman-alpha forest (and quasar absorption in general) in spectra towards z>2 quasars (QSOs). Further constraints on neutrino masses and warm dark matter are also anticipated. The same data will also shed light on galaxy formation via study of the properties of inflowing/outflowing gas associated with nearby galaxies and in a cosmic web context. Gas properties are sensitive to density, temperature, UV radiation, metallicity and abundance pattern, and so constraint galaxy formation in a variety of ways. WEAVE-QSO will study absorbers with a dynamic range spanning more than 8 orders of magnitude in column density, their thermal broadening, and a host of elements and ionization species. A core principal of the WEAVE-QSO survey is the targeting of QSOs with near 100% efficiency principally through use of the J-PAS (r < 23.2) and Gaia (r < 20) data., Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, proceedings of the SF2A conference, Lyon, 2016
- Published
- 2016
3. Diagnosing galactic feedback with the line broadening in the low redshift Lyman-alpha forest
- Author
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Viel, M., Haehnelt, M. G., Bolton, J. S., Kim, T. -S., Puchwein, E., Nasir, F., Wakker, B. P., Viel, M., Haehnelt, M. G., Bolton, J. S., Kim, T. -S., Puchwein, E., Nasir, F., and Wakker, B. P.
- Abstract
We compare the low redshift (z ~ 0.1) Lyman-alpha forest from hydrodynamical simulations with data from the Cosmic Origin Spectrograph (COS). We find tension between the observed number of lines with b-parameters in the range 25-45 km/s and the predictions from simulations that incorporate either vigorous feedback from active galactic nuclei or that exclude feedback altogether. The gas in these simulations is, respectively, either too hot to contribute to the Lyman-alpha absorption or too cold to produce the required line widths. Matching the observed b-parameter distribution therefore requires feedback processes that thermally or turbulently broaden the absorption features without collisionally (over-)ionising hydrogen. This suggests the Lyman-alpha forest b-parameter distribution is a valulable diagnostic of galactic feedback in the low redshift Universe. We furthermore confirm the low redshift Lyman-alpha forest column density distribution is better reproduced by an ultraviolet background with an HI photo-ionisation rate a factor 1.5-3 higher than predicted by Haardt & Madau (2012)., Comment: 5 pages - 1 table - 2 figures
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. WEAVE-QSO: A Massive Intergalactic Medium Survey for the William Herschel Telescope
- Author
-
Pieri, M. M., Bonoli, S., Chaves-Montero, J., Paris, I., Fumagalli, M., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Noterdaeme, P., Miralda-Escudé, J., Busca, N. G., Rahmani, H., Peroux, C., Font-Ribera, A., Trager, S. C., Collaboration, The WEAVE, Pieri, M. M., Bonoli, S., Chaves-Montero, J., Paris, I., Fumagalli, M., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Noterdaeme, P., Miralda-Escudé, J., Busca, N. G., Rahmani, H., Peroux, C., Font-Ribera, A., Trager, S. C., and Collaboration, The WEAVE
- Abstract
In these proceedings we describe the WEAVE-QSO survey, which will observe around 400,000 high redshift quasars starting in 2018. This survey is part of a broader WEAVE survey to be conducted at the 4.2m William Herschel Telescope. We will focus on chiefly on the science goals, but will also briefly summarise the target selection methods anticipated and the expected survey plan. Understanding the apparent acceleration in the expansion of the Universe is one of the key scientific challenges of our time. Many experiments have been proposed to study this expansion, using a variety of techniques. Here we describe a survey that can measure this acceleration and therefore help elucidate the nature of dark energy: a survey of the Lyman-alpha forest (and quasar absorption in general) in spectra towards z>2 quasars (QSOs). Further constraints on neutrino masses and warm dark matter are also anticipated. The same data will also shed light on galaxy formation via study of the properties of inflowing/outflowing gas associated with nearby galaxies and in a cosmic web context. Gas properties are sensitive to density, temperature, UV radiation, metallicity and abundance pattern, and so constraint galaxy formation in a variety of ways. WEAVE-QSO will study absorbers with a dynamic range spanning more than 8 orders of magnitude in column density, their thermal broadening, and a host of elements and ionization species. A core principal of the WEAVE-QSO survey is the targeting of QSOs with near 100% efficiency principally through use of the J-PAS (r < 23.2) and Gaia (r < 20) data., Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, proceedings of the SF2A conference, Lyon, 2016
- Published
- 2016
5. Exploring the Thermal State of the Low-Density Intergalactic Medium at z=3 with an Ultra-High Signal-to-Noise QSO Spectrum
- Author
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Rorai, A., Becker, G. D., Haehnelt, M. G., Carswell, R. F., Bolton, J. S., Cristiani, S., D'Odorico, V., Cupani, G., Barai, P., Calura, F., Kim, T. -S., Pomante, E., Tescari, E., Viel, M., Rorai, A., Becker, G. D., Haehnelt, M. G., Carswell, R. F., Bolton, J. S., Cristiani, S., D'Odorico, V., Cupani, G., Barai, P., Calura, F., Kim, T. -S., Pomante, E., Tescari, E., and Viel, M.
- Abstract
At low densities the standard ionisation history of the intergalactic medium (IGM) predicts a decreasing temperature of the IGM with decreasing density once hydrogen (and helium) reionisation is complete. Heating the high-redshift, low-density IGM above the temperature expected from photo-heating is difficult, and previous claims of high/rising temperatures in low density regions of the Universe based on the probability density function (PDF) of the opacity in Lyman-$\alpha$ forest data at $2
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Diagnosing galactic feedback with the line broadening in the low redshift Lyman-alpha forest
- Author
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Viel, M., Haehnelt, M. G., Bolton, J. S., Kim, T. -S., Puchwein, E., Nasir, F., Wakker, B. P., Viel, M., Haehnelt, M. G., Bolton, J. S., Kim, T. -S., Puchwein, E., Nasir, F., and Wakker, B. P.
- Abstract
We compare the low redshift (z ~ 0.1) Lyman-alpha forest from hydrodynamical simulations with data from the Cosmic Origin Spectrograph (COS). We find tension between the observed number of lines with b-parameters in the range 25-45 km/s and the predictions from simulations that incorporate either vigorous feedback from active galactic nuclei or that exclude feedback altogether. The gas in these simulations is, respectively, either too hot to contribute to the Lyman-alpha absorption or too cold to produce the required line widths. Matching the observed b-parameter distribution therefore requires feedback processes that thermally or turbulently broaden the absorption features without collisionally (over-)ionising hydrogen. This suggests the Lyman-alpha forest b-parameter distribution is a valulable diagnostic of galactic feedback in the low redshift Universe. We furthermore confirm the low redshift Lyman-alpha forest column density distribution is better reproduced by an ultraviolet background with an HI photo-ionisation rate a factor 1.5-3 higher than predicted by Haardt & Madau (2012)., Comment: 5 pages - 1 table - 2 figures
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Simulating the 21 cm forest detectable with LOFAR and SKA in the spectra of high-z GRBs
- Author
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Ciardi, B., Inoue, S., Abdalla, F. B., Asad, K., Bernardi, G., Bolton, J. S., Brentjens, M., de Bruyn, A. G., Chapman, E., Daiboo, S., Fernandez, E. R., Ghosh, A., Graziani, L., Harker, G. J. A., Iliev, I. T., Jelic, V., Jensen, Hannes, Kazemi, S., Koopmans, L. V. E., Martinez, O., Maselli, A., Mellema, Garrelt, Offringa, A. R., Pandey, V. N., Schaye, J., Thomas, R., Vedantham, H., Yatawatta, S., Zaroubi, S., Ciardi, B., Inoue, S., Abdalla, F. B., Asad, K., Bernardi, G., Bolton, J. S., Brentjens, M., de Bruyn, A. G., Chapman, E., Daiboo, S., Fernandez, E. R., Ghosh, A., Graziani, L., Harker, G. J. A., Iliev, I. T., Jelic, V., Jensen, Hannes, Kazemi, S., Koopmans, L. V. E., Martinez, O., Maselli, A., Mellema, Garrelt, Offringa, A. R., Pandey, V. N., Schaye, J., Thomas, R., Vedantham, H., Yatawatta, S., and Zaroubi, S.
- Abstract
We investigate the feasibility of detecting 21 cm absorption features in the afterglow spectra of high redshift long Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs). This is done employing simulations of cosmic reionization, together with estimates of the GRB radio afterglow flux and the instrumental characteristics of the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR). We find that absorption features could be marginally (with a S/N larger than a few) detected by LOFAR at z greater than or similar to 7 if the GRB is a highly energetic event originating from Pop III stars, while the detection would be easier if the noise were reduced by one order of magnitude, i.e. similar to what is expected for the first phase of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA1-low). On the other hand, more standard GRBs are too dim to be detected even with ten times the sensitivity of SKA1-low, and only in the most optimistic case can a S/N larger than a few be reached at z greater than or similar to 9.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Gas around galaxy haloes - II: hydrogen absorption signatures from the environments of galaxies at redshifts 2 < z < 3
- Author
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Meiksin, A., Bolton, J. S., Tittley, E. R., Meiksin, A., Bolton, J. S., and Tittley, E. R.
- Abstract
We compare predictions of large-scale cosmological hydrodynamical simulations for neutral hydrogen absorption signatures in the vicinity of 1e11 - 1e12.5 MSun haloes with observational measurements. Two different hydrodynamical techniques and a variety of prescriptions for gas removal in high density regions are examined. Star formation and wind feedback play only secondary roles in the HI absorption signatures outside the virial radius, but play important roles within. Accordingly, we identify three distinct gaseous regions around a halo: the virialized region, the mesogalactic medium outside the virial radius arising from the extended haloes of galaxies out to about two turnaround radii, and the intergalactic medium beyond. Predictions for the amount of absorption from the mesogalactic and intergalactic media are robust across different methodologies, and the predictions agree with the amount of absorption observed around star-forming galaxies and QSO host galaxies. Recovering the measured amount of absorption within the virialized region, however, requires either a higher dynamic range in the simulations, additional physics, or both., Comment: 15 pages, submitted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Simulating the 21cm forest detectable with LOFAR and SKA in the spectra of high-z GRBs
- Author
-
Ciardi, B., Inoue, S., Abdalla, F. B., Asad, K., Bernardi, G., Bolton, J. S., Brentjens, M., de Bruyn, A. G., Chapman, E., Daiboo, S., Fernandez, E. R., Ghosh, A., Graziani, L., Harker, G. J. A., Iliev, I. T., Jelic, V., Jensen, H., Kazemi, S., Koopmans, L. V. E., Martinez, O., Maselli, A., Mellema, G., Offringa, A. R., Pandey, V. N., Schaye, J., Thomas, R., Vedantham, H., Yatawatta, S., Zaroubi, S., Ciardi, B., Inoue, S., Abdalla, F. B., Asad, K., Bernardi, G., Bolton, J. S., Brentjens, M., de Bruyn, A. G., Chapman, E., Daiboo, S., Fernandez, E. R., Ghosh, A., Graziani, L., Harker, G. J. A., Iliev, I. T., Jelic, V., Jensen, H., Kazemi, S., Koopmans, L. V. E., Martinez, O., Maselli, A., Mellema, G., Offringa, A. R., Pandey, V. N., Schaye, J., Thomas, R., Vedantham, H., Yatawatta, S., and Zaroubi, S.
- Abstract
We investigate the feasibility of detecting 21cm absorption features in the afterglow spectra of high redshift long Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs). This is done employing simulations of cosmic reionization, together with the instrumental characteristics of the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR). We find that absorption features could be marginally (with a S/N larger than a few) detected by LOFAR at z>7 if the GRB originated from PopIII stars, while the detection would be easier if the noise were reduced by one order of magnitude, i.e. similar to what is expected for the first phase of the Square Kilometer Array (SKA1-low). On the other hand, more standard GRBs are too dim to be detected even with ten times the sensitivity of SKA1-low, and only in the most optimistic case can a S/N larger than a few be reached at z>9., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, MNRAS, in press
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Gas around galaxy haloes - II: hydrogen absorption signatures from the environments of galaxies at redshifts 2 < z < 3
- Author
-
Meiksin, A., Bolton, J. S., Tittley, E. R., Meiksin, A., Bolton, J. S., and Tittley, E. R.
- Abstract
We compare predictions of large-scale cosmological hydrodynamical simulations for neutral hydrogen absorption signatures in the vicinity of 1e11 - 1e12.5 MSun haloes with observational measurements. Two different hydrodynamical techniques and a variety of prescriptions for gas removal in high density regions are examined. Star formation and wind feedback play only secondary roles in the HI absorption signatures outside the virial radius, but play important roles within. Accordingly, we identify three distinct gaseous regions around a halo: the virialized region, the mesogalactic medium outside the virial radius arising from the extended haloes of galaxies out to about two turnaround radii, and the intergalactic medium beyond. Predictions for the amount of absorption from the mesogalactic and intergalactic media are robust across different methodologies, and the predictions agree with the amount of absorption observed around star-forming galaxies and QSO host galaxies. Recovering the measured amount of absorption within the virialized region, however, requires either a higher dynamic range in the simulations, additional physics, or both., Comment: 15 pages, submitted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Simulating the 21cm forest detectable with LOFAR and SKA in the spectra of high-z GRBs
- Author
-
Ciardi, B., Inoue, S., Abdalla, F. B., Asad, K., Bernardi, G., Bolton, J. S., Brentjens, M., de Bruyn, A. G., Chapman, E., Daiboo, S., Fernandez, E. R., Ghosh, A., Graziani, L., Harker, G. J. A., Iliev, I. T., Jelic, V., Jensen, H., Kazemi, S., Koopmans, L. V. E., Martinez, O., Maselli, A., Mellema, G., Offringa, A. R., Pandey, V. N., Schaye, J., Thomas, R., Vedantham, H., Yatawatta, S., Zaroubi, S., Ciardi, B., Inoue, S., Abdalla, F. B., Asad, K., Bernardi, G., Bolton, J. S., Brentjens, M., de Bruyn, A. G., Chapman, E., Daiboo, S., Fernandez, E. R., Ghosh, A., Graziani, L., Harker, G. J. A., Iliev, I. T., Jelic, V., Jensen, H., Kazemi, S., Koopmans, L. V. E., Martinez, O., Maselli, A., Mellema, G., Offringa, A. R., Pandey, V. N., Schaye, J., Thomas, R., Vedantham, H., Yatawatta, S., and Zaroubi, S.
- Abstract
We investigate the feasibility of detecting 21cm absorption features in the afterglow spectra of high redshift long Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs). This is done employing simulations of cosmic reionization, together with the instrumental characteristics of the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR). We find that absorption features could be marginally (with a S/N larger than a few) detected by LOFAR at z>7 if the GRB originated from PopIII stars, while the detection would be easier if the noise were reduced by one order of magnitude, i.e. similar to what is expected for the first phase of the Square Kilometer Array (SKA1-low). On the other hand, more standard GRBs are too dim to be detected even with ten times the sensitivity of SKA1-low, and only in the most optimistic case can a S/N larger than a few be reached at z>9., Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures, MNRAS, in press
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Adaptive Mechanical Properties of Topologically Interlocking Material Systems
- Author
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Khandelwal, S, Siegmund, Thomas, Cipra, R J, Bolton, J S, Khandelwal, S, Siegmund, Thomas, Cipra, R J, and Bolton, J S
- Abstract
Topologically interlocked material systems are two-dimensional granular crystals created as ordered and adhesion-less assemblies of unit elements of the shape of platonic solids. The assembly resists transverse forces due to the interlocking geometric arrangement of the unit elements. Topologically interlocked material systems yet require an external constraint to provide resistance under the action of external load. Past work considered fixed and passive constraints only. The objective of the present study is to consider active and adaptive external constraints with the goal to achieve variable stiffness and energy absorption characteristics of the topologically interlocked material system through an active control of the in-plane constraint conditions. Experiments and corresponding model analysis are used to demonstrate control of system stiffness over a wide range, including negative stiffness, and energy absorption characteristics. The adaptive characteristics of the topologically interlocked material system are shown to solve conflicting requirements of simultaneously providing energy absorption while keeping loads controlled. Potential applications can be envisioned in smart structure enhanced response characteristics as desired in shock absorption, protective packaging and catching mechanisms.
- Published
- 2014
13. Adaptive Mechanical Properties of Topologically Interlocking Material Systems
- Author
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Khandelwal, S, Siegmund, Thomas, Cipra, R J, Bolton, J S, Khandelwal, S, Siegmund, Thomas, Cipra, R J, and Bolton, J S
- Abstract
Topologically interlocked material systems are two-dimensional granular crystals created as ordered and adhesion-less assemblies of unit elements of the shape of platonic solids. The assembly resists transverse forces due to the interlocking geometric arrangement of the unit elements. Topologically interlocked material systems yet require an external constraint to provide resistance under the action of external load. Past work considered fixed and passive constraints only. The objective of the present study is to consider active and adaptive external constraints with the goal to achieve variable stiffness and energy absorption characteristics of the topologically interlocked material system through an active control of the in-plane constraint conditions. Experiments and corresponding model analysis are used to demonstrate control of system stiffness over a wide range, including negative stiffness, and energy absorption characteristics. The adaptive characteristics of the topologically interlocked material system are shown to solve conflicting requirements of simultaneously providing energy absorption while keeping loads controlled. Potential applications can be envisioned in smart structure enhanced response characteristics as desired in shock absorption, protective packaging and catching mechanisms.
- Published
- 2014
14. Warm Dark Matter as a solution to the small scale crisis: new constraints from high redshift Lyman-alpha forest data
- Author
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Viel, M., Becker, G. D., Bolton, J. S., Haehnelt, M. G., Viel, M., Becker, G. D., Bolton, J. S., and Haehnelt, M. G.
- Abstract
We present updated constraints on the free-streaming of warm dark matter (WDM) particles derived from an analysis of the Lya flux power spectrum measured from high-resolution spectra of 25 z > 4 quasars obtained with the Keck High Resolution Echelle Spectrometer (HIRES) and the Magellan Inamori Kyocera Echelle (MIKE) spectrograph. We utilize a new suite of high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations that explore WDM masses of 1, 2 and 4 keV (assuming the WDM consists of thermal relics), along with different physically motivated thermal histories. We carefully address different sources of systematic error that may affect our final results and perform an analysis of the Lya flux power with conservative error estimates. By using a method that samples the multi-dimensional astrophysical and cosmological parameter space, we obtain a lower limit mwdm > 3.3 keV (2sigma) for warm dark matter particles in the form of early decoupled thermal relics. Adding the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Lya flux power spectrum does not improve this limit. Thermal relics of masses 1 keV, 2 keV and 2.5 keV are disfavoured by the data at about the 9sigma, 4sigma and 3sigma C.L., respectively. Our analysis disfavours WDM models where there is a suppression in the linear matter power spectrum at (non-linear) scales corresponding to k=10h/Mpc which deviates more than 10% from a LCDM model. Given this limit, the corresponding "free-streaming mass" below which the mass function may be suppressed is 2x10^8 Msun/h. There is thus very little room for a contribution of the free-streaming of WDM to the solution of what has been termed the small scale crisis of cold dark matter., Comment: 20 pages, 17 figures. Accepted to PRD
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Warm Dark Matter as a solution to the small scale crisis: new constraints from high redshift Lyman-alpha forest data
- Author
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Viel, M., Becker, G. D., Bolton, J. S., Haehnelt, M. G., Viel, M., Becker, G. D., Bolton, J. S., and Haehnelt, M. G.
- Abstract
We present updated constraints on the free-streaming of warm dark matter (WDM) particles derived from an analysis of the Lya flux power spectrum measured from high-resolution spectra of 25 z > 4 quasars obtained with the Keck High Resolution Echelle Spectrometer (HIRES) and the Magellan Inamori Kyocera Echelle (MIKE) spectrograph. We utilize a new suite of high-resolution hydrodynamical simulations that explore WDM masses of 1, 2 and 4 keV (assuming the WDM consists of thermal relics), along with different physically motivated thermal histories. We carefully address different sources of systematic error that may affect our final results and perform an analysis of the Lya flux power with conservative error estimates. By using a method that samples the multi-dimensional astrophysical and cosmological parameter space, we obtain a lower limit mwdm > 3.3 keV (2sigma) for warm dark matter particles in the form of early decoupled thermal relics. Adding the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Lya flux power spectrum does not improve this limit. Thermal relics of masses 1 keV, 2 keV and 2.5 keV are disfavoured by the data at about the 9sigma, 4sigma and 3sigma C.L., respectively. Our analysis disfavours WDM models where there is a suppression in the linear matter power spectrum at (non-linear) scales corresponding to k=10h/Mpc which deviates more than 10% from a LCDM model. Given this limit, the corresponding "free-streaming mass" below which the mass function may be suppressed is 2x10^8 Msun/h. There is thus very little room for a contribution of the free-streaming of WDM to the solution of what has been termed the small scale crisis of cold dark matter., Comment: 20 pages, 17 figures. Accepted to PRD
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. A thermophone on porous polymeric substrate
- Author
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Chitnis, Girish, Kim, Albert, Song, Seung Hyun, Jessop, A. M., Bolton, J. S., Ziaie, Babak, Chitnis, Girish, Kim, Albert, Song, Seung Hyun, Jessop, A. M., Bolton, J. S., and Ziaie, Babak
- Abstract
In this Letter, we present a simple, low-temperature method for fabricating a wide-band (>80 kHz) thermo-acoustic sound generator on a porous polymeric substrate. We were able to achieve up to 80 dB of sound pressure level with an input power of 0.511 W. No significant surface temperature increase was observed in the device even at an input power level of 2.5 W. Wide-band ultrasonic performance, simplicity of structure, and scalability of the fabrication process make this device suitable for many ranging and imaging applications. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4737005]
- Published
- 2012
17. A thermophone on porous polymeric substrate
- Author
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Chitnis, Girish, Kim, Albert, Song, Seung Hyun, Jessop, A. M., Bolton, J. S., Ziaie, Babak, Chitnis, Girish, Kim, Albert, Song, Seung Hyun, Jessop, A. M., Bolton, J. S., and Ziaie, Babak
- Abstract
In this Letter, we present a simple, low-temperature method for fabricating a wide-band (>80 kHz) thermo-acoustic sound generator on a porous polymeric substrate. We were able to achieve up to 80 dB of sound pressure level with an input power of 0.511 W. No significant surface temperature increase was observed in the device even at an input power level of 2.5 W. Wide-band ultrasonic performance, simplicity of structure, and scalability of the fabrication process make this device suitable for many ranging and imaging applications. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4737005]
- Published
- 2012
18. Prospects for detecting the 21cm forest from the diffuse intergalactic medium with LOFAR
- Author
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Ciardi, B., Labropoulos, P., Maselli, A., Thomas, R., Zaroubi, S., Graziani, L., Bolton, J. S., Bernardi, G., Brentjens, M., de Bruyn, A. G., Daiboo, S., Harker, G. J. A., Jelic, V., Kazemi, S., Koopmans, L. V. E., Martinez, O., Mellema, G., Offringa, A. R., Pandey, V. N., Schaye, J., Veligatla, V., Vedantham, H., Yatawatta, S., Ciardi, B., Labropoulos, P., Maselli, A., Thomas, R., Zaroubi, S., Graziani, L., Bolton, J. S., Bernardi, G., Brentjens, M., de Bruyn, A. G., Daiboo, S., Harker, G. J. A., Jelic, V., Kazemi, S., Koopmans, L. V. E., Martinez, O., Mellema, G., Offringa, A. R., Pandey, V. N., Schaye, J., Veligatla, V., Vedantham, H., and Yatawatta, S.
- Abstract
We discuss the feasibility of the detection of the 21cm forest in the diffuse IGM with the radio telescope LOFAR. The optical depth to the 21cm line has been derived using simulations of reionization which include detailed radiative transfer of ionizing photons. We find that the spectra from reionization models with similar total comoving hydrogen ionizing emissivity but different frequency distribution look remarkably similar. Thus, unless the reionization histories are very different from each other (e.g. a predominance of UV vs. x-ray heating) we do not expect to distinguish them by means of observations of the 21cm forest. Because the presence of a strong x-ray background would make the detection of 21cm line absorption impossible, the lack of absorption could be used as a probe of the presence/intensity of the x-ray background and the thermal history of the universe. Along a random line of sight LOFAR could detect a global suppression of the spectrum from z>12, when the IGM is still mostly neutral and cold, in contrast with the more well-defined, albeit broad, absorption features visible at lower redshift. Sharp, strong absorption features associated with rare, high density pockets of gas could be detected also at z~7 along preferential lines of sight., Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures. MNRAS, in press
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The intergalactic medium thermal history at redshift z=1.7--3.2 from the Lyman alpha forest: a comparison of measurements using wavelets and the flux distribution
- Author
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Garzilli, A., Bolton, J. S., Kim, T. -S., Leach, S., Viel, M., Garzilli, A., Bolton, J. S., Kim, T. -S., Leach, S., and Viel, M.
- Abstract
We investigate the thermal history of the intergalactic medium (IGM) in the redshift interval z=1.7--3.2 by studying the small-scale fluctuations in the Lyman alpha forest transmitted flux. We apply a wavelet filtering technique to eighteen high resolution quasar spectra obtained with the Ultraviolet and Visual Echelle Spectrograph (UVES), and compare these data to synthetic spectra drawn from a suite of hydrodynamical simulations in which the IGM thermal state and cosmological parameters are varied. From the wavelet analysis we obtain estimates of the IGM thermal state that are in good agreement with other recent, independent wavelet-based measurements. We also perform a reanalysis of the same data set using the Lyman alpha forest flux probability distribution function (PDF), which has previously been used to measure the IGM temperature-density relation. This provides an important consistency test for measurements of the IGM thermal state, as it enables a direct comparison of the constraints obtained using these two different methodologies. We find the constraints obtained from wavelets and the flux PDF are formally consistent with each other, although in agreement with previous studies, the flux PDF constraints favour an isothermal or inverted IGM temperature-density relation. We also perform a joint analysis by combining our wavelet and flux PDF measurements, constraining the IGM thermal state at z=2.1 to have a temperature at mean density of T0/[10^3 K]=17.3 +/- 1.9 and a power-law temperature-density relation exponent gamma=1.1 +/- 0.1 (1 sigma). Our results are consistent with previous observations that indicate there may be additional sources of heating in the IGM at z<4., Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, matches version accepted for publication on MNRAS
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Lyman alpha forest flux probability distribution at z>3
- Author
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Calura, F., Tescari, E., D'Odorico, V., Viel, M., Cristiani, S., Kim, T. -S., Bolton, J. S., Calura, F., Tescari, E., D'Odorico, V., Viel, M., Cristiani, S., Kim, T. -S., and Bolton, J. S.
- Abstract
We present a measurement of the Lyman alpha flux probability distribution function (PDF) measured from a set of eight high resolution quasar spectra with emission redshifts at 3.3 < z < 3.8. We carefully study the effect of metal absorption lines on the shape of the PDF. Metals have a larger impact on the PDF measurements at lower redshift, where there are fewer Lyman alpha absorption lines. This may be explained by an increase in the number of metal lines which are blended with Lyman alpha absorption lines toward higher redshift, but may also be due to the presence of fewer metals in the intergalactic medium with increasing lookback time. We also provide a new measurement of the redshift evolution of the effective optical depth, tau_eff, at 2.8 < z < 3.6, and find no evidence for a deviation from a power law evolution in the log(tau_eff)-log(1+z) plane. The flux PDF measurements are furthermore of interest for studies of the thermal state of the intergalactic medium (IGM) at z ~ 3 . By comparing the PDF to state-of-the-art cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, we place constraints on the temperature of the IGM and compare our results with previous measurements of the PDF at lower redshift. At redshift z=3, our new PDF measurements are consistent with an isothermal temperature-density relation, T=T_0 Delta^{gamma-1}, with a temperature at the mean density of T_0 = 19250 +/- 4800 K and a slope gamma=0.90+/-0.21 (1 sigma uncertainties). In comparison, joint constraints with previous PDF measurements at z<3 favour an inverted (gamma<1) temperature-density relation with T_0=17900 +/- 3500 K and gamma=0.70 +/- 0.12, in broad agreement with previous analyses., Comment: 20 pages, 17 figures, MNRAS, accepted for publication, minor changes after referee report
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. A thermophone on porous polymeric substrate
- Author
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Chitnis, Girish, Kim, Albert, Song, Seung Hyun, Jessop, A. M., Bolton, J. S., Ziaie, Babak, Chitnis, Girish, Kim, Albert, Song, Seung Hyun, Jessop, A. M., Bolton, J. S., and Ziaie, Babak
- Abstract
In this Letter, we present a simple, low-temperature method for fabricating a wide-band (>80 kHz) thermo-acoustic sound generator on a porous polymeric substrate. We were able to achieve up to 80 dB of sound pressure level with an input power of 0.511 W. No significant surface temperature increase was observed in the device even at an input power level of 2.5 W. Wide-band ultrasonic performance, simplicity of structure, and scalability of the fabrication process make this device suitable for many ranging and imaging applications. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4737005]
- Published
- 2012
22. A thermophone on porous polymeric substrate
- Author
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Chitnis, Girish, Kim, Albert, Song, Seung Hyun, Jessop, A. M., Bolton, J. S., Ziaie, Babak, Chitnis, Girish, Kim, Albert, Song, Seung Hyun, Jessop, A. M., Bolton, J. S., and Ziaie, Babak
- Abstract
In this Letter, we present a simple, low-temperature method for fabricating a wide-band (>80 kHz) thermo-acoustic sound generator on a porous polymeric substrate. We were able to achieve up to 80 dB of sound pressure level with an input power of 0.511 W. No significant surface temperature increase was observed in the device even at an input power level of 2.5 W. Wide-band ultrasonic performance, simplicity of structure, and scalability of the fabrication process make this device suitable for many ranging and imaging applications. (C) 2012 American Institute of Physics. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4737005]
- Published
- 2012
23. Prospects for detecting the 21cm forest from the diffuse intergalactic medium with LOFAR
- Author
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Ciardi, B., Labropoulos, P., Maselli, A., Thomas, R., Zaroubi, S., Graziani, L., Bolton, J. S., Bernardi, G., Brentjens, M., de Bruyn, A. G., Daiboo, S., Harker, G. J. A., Jelic, V., Kazemi, S., Koopmans, L. V. E., Martinez, O., Mellema, G., Offringa, A. R., Pandey, V. N., Schaye, J., Veligatla, V., Vedantham, H., Yatawatta, S., Ciardi, B., Labropoulos, P., Maselli, A., Thomas, R., Zaroubi, S., Graziani, L., Bolton, J. S., Bernardi, G., Brentjens, M., de Bruyn, A. G., Daiboo, S., Harker, G. J. A., Jelic, V., Kazemi, S., Koopmans, L. V. E., Martinez, O., Mellema, G., Offringa, A. R., Pandey, V. N., Schaye, J., Veligatla, V., Vedantham, H., and Yatawatta, S.
- Abstract
We discuss the feasibility of the detection of the 21cm forest in the diffuse IGM with the radio telescope LOFAR. The optical depth to the 21cm line has been derived using simulations of reionization which include detailed radiative transfer of ionizing photons. We find that the spectra from reionization models with similar total comoving hydrogen ionizing emissivity but different frequency distribution look remarkably similar. Thus, unless the reionization histories are very different from each other (e.g. a predominance of UV vs. x-ray heating) we do not expect to distinguish them by means of observations of the 21cm forest. Because the presence of a strong x-ray background would make the detection of 21cm line absorption impossible, the lack of absorption could be used as a probe of the presence/intensity of the x-ray background and the thermal history of the universe. Along a random line of sight LOFAR could detect a global suppression of the spectrum from z>12, when the IGM is still mostly neutral and cold, in contrast with the more well-defined, albeit broad, absorption features visible at lower redshift. Sharp, strong absorption features associated with rare, high density pockets of gas could be detected also at z~7 along preferential lines of sight., Comment: 12 pages, 13 figures. MNRAS, in press
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. The Lyman alpha forest flux probability distribution at z>3
- Author
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Calura, F., Tescari, E., D'Odorico, V., Viel, M., Cristiani, S., Kim, T. -S., Bolton, J. S., Calura, F., Tescari, E., D'Odorico, V., Viel, M., Cristiani, S., Kim, T. -S., and Bolton, J. S.
- Abstract
We present a measurement of the Lyman alpha flux probability distribution function (PDF) measured from a set of eight high resolution quasar spectra with emission redshifts at 3.3 < z < 3.8. We carefully study the effect of metal absorption lines on the shape of the PDF. Metals have a larger impact on the PDF measurements at lower redshift, where there are fewer Lyman alpha absorption lines. This may be explained by an increase in the number of metal lines which are blended with Lyman alpha absorption lines toward higher redshift, but may also be due to the presence of fewer metals in the intergalactic medium with increasing lookback time. We also provide a new measurement of the redshift evolution of the effective optical depth, tau_eff, at 2.8 < z < 3.6, and find no evidence for a deviation from a power law evolution in the log(tau_eff)-log(1+z) plane. The flux PDF measurements are furthermore of interest for studies of the thermal state of the intergalactic medium (IGM) at z ~ 3 . By comparing the PDF to state-of-the-art cosmological hydrodynamical simulations, we place constraints on the temperature of the IGM and compare our results with previous measurements of the PDF at lower redshift. At redshift z=3, our new PDF measurements are consistent with an isothermal temperature-density relation, T=T_0 Delta^{gamma-1}, with a temperature at the mean density of T_0 = 19250 +/- 4800 K and a slope gamma=0.90+/-0.21 (1 sigma uncertainties). In comparison, joint constraints with previous PDF measurements at z<3 favour an inverted (gamma<1) temperature-density relation with T_0=17900 +/- 3500 K and gamma=0.70 +/- 0.12, in broad agreement with previous analyses., Comment: 20 pages, 17 figures, MNRAS, accepted for publication, minor changes after referee report
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The intergalactic medium thermal history at redshift z=1.7--3.2 from the Lyman alpha forest: a comparison of measurements using wavelets and the flux distribution
- Author
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Garzilli, A., Bolton, J. S., Kim, T. -S., Leach, S., Viel, M., Garzilli, A., Bolton, J. S., Kim, T. -S., Leach, S., and Viel, M.
- Abstract
We investigate the thermal history of the intergalactic medium (IGM) in the redshift interval z=1.7--3.2 by studying the small-scale fluctuations in the Lyman alpha forest transmitted flux. We apply a wavelet filtering technique to eighteen high resolution quasar spectra obtained with the Ultraviolet and Visual Echelle Spectrograph (UVES), and compare these data to synthetic spectra drawn from a suite of hydrodynamical simulations in which the IGM thermal state and cosmological parameters are varied. From the wavelet analysis we obtain estimates of the IGM thermal state that are in good agreement with other recent, independent wavelet-based measurements. We also perform a reanalysis of the same data set using the Lyman alpha forest flux probability distribution function (PDF), which has previously been used to measure the IGM temperature-density relation. This provides an important consistency test for measurements of the IGM thermal state, as it enables a direct comparison of the constraints obtained using these two different methodologies. We find the constraints obtained from wavelets and the flux PDF are formally consistent with each other, although in agreement with previous studies, the flux PDF constraints favour an isothermal or inverted IGM temperature-density relation. We also perform a joint analysis by combining our wavelet and flux PDF measurements, constraining the IGM thermal state at z=2.1 to have a temperature at mean density of T0/[10^3 K]=17.3 +/- 1.9 and a power-law temperature-density relation exponent gamma=1.1 +/- 0.1 (1 sigma). Our results are consistent with previous observations that indicate there may be additional sources of heating in the IGM at z<4., Comment: 15 pages, 14 figures, matches version accepted for publication on MNRAS
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The effect of intergalactic helium on hydrogen reionisation: implications for the sources of ionising photons at z > 6
- Author
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Ciardi, B., Bolton, J. S., Maselli, A., Graziani, L., Ciardi, B., Bolton, J. S., Maselli, A., and Graziani, L.
- Abstract
We investigate the effect of helium on hydrogen reionisation using a hydrodynamical simulation combined with the cosmological radiative transfer code CRASH. The simulations are run in a 35.12/h comoving Mpc box using a variety of assumptions for the amplitude and power-law extreme-UV (EUV) spectral index, alpha, of the ionising emissivity. We use an empirically motivated prescription for ionising sources which ensures all of the models are consistent with constraints on the Thomson scattering optical depth and the hydrogen photo-ionisation rate at z=6. The inclusion of helium slightly delays reionisation due to the small number of ionising photons which reionise neutral helium instead of hydrogen. However, helium has a significant impact on the thermal state of the IGM. Models with alpha=3 produce IGM temperatures at the mean density at z=6 which are about 20 % higher compared to models without helium photo-heating. Harder EUV indices produce even larger IGM temperature boosts. A comparison to recent observational estimates of the IGM temperature at z=5 - 6 suggests that hydrogen reionisation was primarily driven by pop-II stellar sources with a soft EUV index, alpha<3. We also find that faint, as yet undetected galaxies, characterised by a luminosity function with a steepening faint-end slope and an increasing Lyman continuum escape fraction (fesc=0.5), are required to reproduce the ionising emissivity used in our simulations at z>6. Finally, we note there is some tension between recent observational constraints which indicate the IGM is > 10% neutral by volume z=7, and estimates of the ionising emissivity at z=6 which indicate only between 1 and 3 ionising photons are emitted per hydrogen atom over a Hubble time. This tension may be alleviated by either a lower neutral fraction at z=7 or an IGM which still remains a few % neutral by volume at z=6., Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures; MNRAS in press
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The effect of intergalactic helium on hydrogen reionisation: implications for the sources of ionising photons at z > 6
- Author
-
Ciardi, B., Bolton, J. S., Maselli, A., Graziani, L., Ciardi, B., Bolton, J. S., Maselli, A., and Graziani, L.
- Abstract
We investigate the effect of helium on hydrogen reionisation using a hydrodynamical simulation combined with the cosmological radiative transfer code CRASH. The simulations are run in a 35.12/h comoving Mpc box using a variety of assumptions for the amplitude and power-law extreme-UV (EUV) spectral index, alpha, of the ionising emissivity. We use an empirically motivated prescription for ionising sources which ensures all of the models are consistent with constraints on the Thomson scattering optical depth and the hydrogen photo-ionisation rate at z=6. The inclusion of helium slightly delays reionisation due to the small number of ionising photons which reionise neutral helium instead of hydrogen. However, helium has a significant impact on the thermal state of the IGM. Models with alpha=3 produce IGM temperatures at the mean density at z=6 which are about 20 % higher compared to models without helium photo-heating. Harder EUV indices produce even larger IGM temperature boosts. A comparison to recent observational estimates of the IGM temperature at z=5 - 6 suggests that hydrogen reionisation was primarily driven by pop-II stellar sources with a soft EUV index, alpha<3. We also find that faint, as yet undetected galaxies, characterised by a luminosity function with a steepening faint-end slope and an increasing Lyman continuum escape fraction (fesc=0.5), are required to reproduce the ionising emissivity used in our simulations at z>6. Finally, we note there is some tension between recent observational constraints which indicate the IGM is > 10% neutral by volume z=7, and estimates of the ionising emissivity at z=6 which indicate only between 1 and 3 ionising photons are emitted per hydrogen atom over a Hubble time. This tension may be alleviated by either a lower neutral fraction at z=7 or an IGM which still remains a few % neutral by volume at z=6., Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures; MNRAS in press
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Cosmological and astrophysical constraints from the Lyman-alpha forest flux probability distribution function
- Author
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Viel, M., Bolton, J. S., Haehnelt, M. G., Viel, M., Bolton, J. S., and Haehnelt, M. G.
- Abstract
We use the probability distribution function (PDF) of the lya forest flux at z=2-3, measured from high-resolution UVES/VLT data, and hydrodynamical simulations to obtain constraints on cosmological parameters and the thermal state of the intergalactic medium (IGM) at z 2-3. The observed flux PDF at z=3 alone results in constraints on cosmological parameters in good agreement with those obtained from the WMAP data, albeit with about a factor two larger errors. The observed flux PDF is best fit with simulations with a matter fluctuation amplitude of sigma_8=0.8-0.85 \pm 0.07 and an inverted IGM temperature-density relation (gamma ~ 0.5-0.75), consistent with our previous results obtained using a simpler analysis. These results appear to be robust to uncertainties in the quasar (QSO) continuum placement. We further discuss constraints obtained by a combined analysis of the high-resolution flux PDF and the power spectrum measured from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) lya forest data. The joint analysis confirms the suggestion of an inverted temperature-density relation, but prefers somewhat higher values (sigma_8 ~ 0.9) of the matter fluctuation amplitude than the WMAP data and the best fit to the flux PDF alone. The joint analysis of the flux PDF and power spectrum (as well as an analysis of the power spectrum data alone) prefers rather large values for the temperature of the IGM, perhaps suggesting that we have identified a not yet accounted for systematic error in the SDSS flux power spectrum data or that the standard model describing the thermal state of the IGM at z ~ 2-3 is incomplete., Comment: 5+ pages, MNRAS Letters in press
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Cosmological and astrophysical constraints from the Lyman-alpha forest flux probability distribution function
- Author
-
Viel, M., Bolton, J. S., Haehnelt, M. G., Viel, M., Bolton, J. S., and Haehnelt, M. G.
- Abstract
We use the probability distribution function (PDF) of the lya forest flux at z=2-3, measured from high-resolution UVES/VLT data, and hydrodynamical simulations to obtain constraints on cosmological parameters and the thermal state of the intergalactic medium (IGM) at z 2-3. The observed flux PDF at z=3 alone results in constraints on cosmological parameters in good agreement with those obtained from the WMAP data, albeit with about a factor two larger errors. The observed flux PDF is best fit with simulations with a matter fluctuation amplitude of sigma_8=0.8-0.85 \pm 0.07 and an inverted IGM temperature-density relation (gamma ~ 0.5-0.75), consistent with our previous results obtained using a simpler analysis. These results appear to be robust to uncertainties in the quasar (QSO) continuum placement. We further discuss constraints obtained by a combined analysis of the high-resolution flux PDF and the power spectrum measured from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) lya forest data. The joint analysis confirms the suggestion of an inverted temperature-density relation, but prefers somewhat higher values (sigma_8 ~ 0.9) of the matter fluctuation amplitude than the WMAP data and the best fit to the flux PDF alone. The joint analysis of the flux PDF and power spectrum (as well as an analysis of the power spectrum data alone) prefers rather large values for the temperature of the IGM, perhaps suggesting that we have identified a not yet accounted for systematic error in the SDSS flux power spectrum data or that the standard model describing the thermal state of the IGM at z ~ 2-3 is incomplete., Comment: 5+ pages, MNRAS Letters in press
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. How cold is cold dark matter? Small scales constraints from the flux power spectrum of the high-redshift Lyman-alpha forest
- Author
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Viel, M., Becker, G. D., Bolton, J. S., Haehnelt, M. G., Rauch, M., Sargent, W. L. W., Viel, M., Becker, G. D., Bolton, J. S., Haehnelt, M. G., Rauch, M., and Sargent, W. L. W.
- Abstract
We present constraints on the mass of warm dark matter (WDM) particles derived from the Lyman-alpha flux power spectrum of 55 high- resolution HIRES spectra at 2.0 < z < 6.4. From the HIRES spectra, we obtain a lower limit of mwdm > 1.2 keV 2 sigma if the WDM consists of early decoupled thermal relics and mwdm > 5.6 keV (2 sigma) for sterile neutrinos. Adding the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Lyman-alpha flux power spectrum, we get mwdm > 4 keV and mwdm > 28 keV (2 sigma) for thermal relics and sterile neutrinos. These results improve previous constraints by a factor two., Comment: Some issues clarified (especially resolution related). Conclusions unchanged. Accepted version by PRL
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. How cold is cold dark matter? Small scales constraints from the flux power spectrum of the high-redshift Lyman-alpha forest
- Author
-
Viel, M., Becker, G. D., Bolton, J. S., Haehnelt, M. G., Rauch, M., Sargent, W. L. W., Viel, M., Becker, G. D., Bolton, J. S., Haehnelt, M. G., Rauch, M., and Sargent, W. L. W.
- Abstract
We present constraints on the mass of warm dark matter (WDM) particles derived from the Lyman-alpha flux power spectrum of 55 high- resolution HIRES spectra at 2.0 < z < 6.4. From the HIRES spectra, we obtain a lower limit of mwdm > 1.2 keV 2 sigma if the WDM consists of early decoupled thermal relics and mwdm > 5.6 keV (2 sigma) for sterile neutrinos. Adding the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Lyman-alpha flux power spectrum, we get mwdm > 4 keV and mwdm > 28 keV (2 sigma) for thermal relics and sterile neutrinos. These results improve previous constraints by a factor two., Comment: Some issues clarified (especially resolution related). Conclusions unchanged. Accepted version by PRL
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Possible evidence for an inverted temperature-density relation in the intergalactic medium from the flux distribution of the Lyman-alpha forest
- Author
-
Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Kim, T. -S., Haehnelt, M. G., Carswell, R. F., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Kim, T. -S., Haehnelt, M. G., and Carswell, R. F.
- Abstract
We compare the improved measurement of the Lya forest flux probability distribution at 1.7
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. An improved measurement of the flux distribution of the Ly-alpha forest in QSO absorption spectra: the effect of continuum fitting, metal contamination and noise properties
- Author
-
Kim, T. -S., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Haehnelt, M. G., Carswell, R. F., Kim, T. -S., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Haehnelt, M. G., and Carswell, R. F.
- Abstract
We have performed an extensive Voigt profile analysis of the neutral hydrogen (HI) and metal absorption present in a sample of 18 high resolution, high signal-to-noise QSO spectra observed with VLT/UVES. We use this analysis to separate the metal contribution from the HI absorption and present an improved measurement of the flux probability distribution function (PDF) due to HI absorption alone at
= 2.07, 2.52, and 2.94. The flux PDF is sensitive to the continuum fit in the normalised flux range 0.8 < F < 1.0 and to metal absorption at 0.2 < F < 0.8. Our new measurements of the flux PDF due to HI absorption alone are systematically lower at 0.2 < F < 0.8 by up to 30% compared to the widely used measurement of McDonald et al. (2000), based on a significantly smaller sample of Keck/HIRES data. This discrepancy is probably due to a combination of our improved removal of the metal absorption and cosmic variance, since variations in the flux PDF between different lines-of-sight are large. The HI effective optical depth at 1.7 < z < 4 is best fit with a single power law, (0.0023 +-0.0007) (1+z)^(3.65 +- 0.21), in good agreement with previous measurements from comparable data. As also found previously, the effect of noise on the flux distribution is not significant in high resolution, high signal-to-noise data., Comment: Accepted 2007 September 3 for publication on MNRAS, 21 pages, 13 figures and 6 tables. Data and high-resolution versions of Figs. 2, 3 and 4 and of the paper are available on http://adlibitum.oat.ts.astro.it/viel/PDF - Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Possible evidence for an inverted temperature-density relation in the intergalactic medium from the flux distribution of the Lyman-alpha forest
- Author
-
Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Kim, T. -S., Haehnelt, M. G., Carswell, R. F., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Kim, T. -S., Haehnelt, M. G., and Carswell, R. F.
- Abstract
We compare the improved measurement of the Lya forest flux probability distribution at 1.7
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. An improved measurement of the flux distribution of the Ly-alpha forest in QSO absorption spectra: the effect of continuum fitting, metal contamination and noise properties
- Author
-
Kim, T. -S., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Haehnelt, M. G., Carswell, R. F., Kim, T. -S., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Haehnelt, M. G., and Carswell, R. F.
- Abstract
We have performed an extensive Voigt profile analysis of the neutral hydrogen (HI) and metal absorption present in a sample of 18 high resolution, high signal-to-noise QSO spectra observed with VLT/UVES. We use this analysis to separate the metal contribution from the HI absorption and present an improved measurement of the flux probability distribution function (PDF) due to HI absorption alone at
= 2.07, 2.52, and 2.94. The flux PDF is sensitive to the continuum fit in the normalised flux range 0.8 < F < 1.0 and to metal absorption at 0.2 < F < 0.8. Our new measurements of the flux PDF due to HI absorption alone are systematically lower at 0.2 < F < 0.8 by up to 30% compared to the widely used measurement of McDonald et al. (2000), based on a significantly smaller sample of Keck/HIRES data. This discrepancy is probably due to a combination of our improved removal of the metal absorption and cosmic variance, since variations in the flux PDF between different lines-of-sight are large. The HI effective optical depth at 1.7 < z < 4 is best fit with a single power law, (0.0023 +-0.0007) (1+z)^(3.65 +- 0.21), in good agreement with previous measurements from comparable data. As also found previously, the effect of noise on the flux distribution is not significant in high resolution, high signal-to-noise data., Comment: Accepted 2007 September 3 for publication on MNRAS, 21 pages, 13 figures and 6 tables. Data and high-resolution versions of Figs. 2, 3 and 4 and of the paper are available on http://adlibitum.oat.ts.astro.it/viel/PDF - Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Possible evidence for an inverted temperature-density relation in the intergalactic medium from the flux distribution of the Lyman-alpha forest
- Author
-
Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Kim, T. -S., Haehnelt, M. G., Carswell, R. F., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Kim, T. -S., Haehnelt, M. G., and Carswell, R. F.
- Abstract
We compare the improved measurement of the Lya forest flux probability distribution at 1.7
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. An improved measurement of the flux distribution of the Ly-alpha forest in QSO absorption spectra: the effect of continuum fitting, metal contamination and noise properties
- Author
-
Kim, T. -S., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Haehnelt, M. G., Carswell, R. F., Kim, T. -S., Bolton, J. S., Viel, M., Haehnelt, M. G., and Carswell, R. F.
- Abstract
We have performed an extensive Voigt profile analysis of the neutral hydrogen (HI) and metal absorption present in a sample of 18 high resolution, high signal-to-noise QSO spectra observed with VLT/UVES. We use this analysis to separate the metal contribution from the HI absorption and present an improved measurement of the flux probability distribution function (PDF) due to HI absorption alone at
= 2.07, 2.52, and 2.94. The flux PDF is sensitive to the continuum fit in the normalised flux range 0.8 < F < 1.0 and to metal absorption at 0.2 < F < 0.8. Our new measurements of the flux PDF due to HI absorption alone are systematically lower at 0.2 < F < 0.8 by up to 30% compared to the widely used measurement of McDonald et al. (2000), based on a significantly smaller sample of Keck/HIRES data. This discrepancy is probably due to a combination of our improved removal of the metal absorption and cosmic variance, since variations in the flux PDF between different lines-of-sight are large. The HI effective optical depth at 1.7 < z < 4 is best fit with a single power law, (0.0023 +-0.0007) (1+z)^(3.65 +- 0.21), in good agreement with previous measurements from comparable data. As also found previously, the effect of noise on the flux distribution is not significant in high resolution, high signal-to-noise data., Comment: Accepted 2007 September 3 for publication on MNRAS, 21 pages, 13 figures and 6 tables. Data and high-resolution versions of Figs. 2, 3 and 4 and of the paper are available on http://adlibitum.oat.ts.astro.it/viel/PDF - Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. How cold is cold dark matter? Small scales constraints from the flux power spectrum of the high-redshift Lyman-alpha forest
- Author
-
Viel, M., Becker, G. D., Bolton, J. S., Haehnelt, M. G., Rauch, M., Sargent, W. L. W., Viel, M., Becker, G. D., Bolton, J. S., Haehnelt, M. G., Rauch, M., and Sargent, W. L. W.
- Abstract
We present constraints on the mass of warm dark matter (WDM) particles derived from the Lyman-alpha flux power spectrum of 55 high- resolution HIRES spectra at 2.0 < z < 6.4. From the HIRES spectra, we obtain a lower limit of mwdm > 1.2 keV 2 sigma if the WDM consists of early decoupled thermal relics and mwdm > 5.6 keV (2 sigma) for sterile neutrinos. Adding the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Lyman-alpha flux power spectrum, we get mwdm > 4 keV and mwdm > 28 keV (2 sigma) for thermal relics and sterile neutrinos. These results improve previous constraints by a factor two., Comment: Some issues clarified (especially resolution related). Conclusions unchanged. Accepted version by PRL
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Experimental Statistical Energy Analysis Applied To A Rolling Piston-Type Rotary Compressor
- Author
-
Ma, Y. C., Bolton, J. S., Jeong, H., Ahn, B., Shin, C., Ma, Y. C., Bolton, J. S., Jeong, H., Ahn, B., and Shin, C.
- Published
- 2002
40. Experimental Statistical Energy Analysis Applied To A Rolling Piston-Type Rotary Compressor
- Author
-
Ma, Y. C., Bolton, J. S., Jeong, H., Ahn, B., Shin, C., Ma, Y. C., Bolton, J. S., Jeong, H., Ahn, B., and Shin, C.
- Published
- 2002
41. Acoustical Holography in Spherical Coordinates for Noise Source Identification
- Author
-
DeVries, L. A., Bolton, J. S., DeVries, L. A., and Bolton, J. S.
- Published
- 1994
42. Acoustical Holography in Spherical Coordinates for Noise Source Identification
- Author
-
DeVries, L. A., Bolton, J. S., DeVries, L. A., and Bolton, J. S.
- Published
- 1994
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