3,866 results on '"Bowman, J."'
Search Results
2. Mitigating calibration errors from mutual coupling with time-domain filtering of 21 cm cosmological radio observations
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Charles, N., Kern, N. S., Pascua, R., Bernardi, G., Bester, L., Smirnov, O., Acedo, E. d. L., Abdurashidova, Z., Adams, T., Aguirre, J. E., Baartman, R., Beardsley, A. P., Berkhout, L. M., Billings, T. S., Bowman, J. D., Bull, P., Burba, J., Byrne, R., Carey, S., Chen, K., Choudhuri, S., Cox, T., DeBoer, D. R., Dexter, M., Dillon, J. S., Dynes, S., Eksteen, N., Ely, J., Ewall-Wice, A., Fritz, R., Furlanetto, S. R., Gale-Sides, K., Garsden, H., Gehlot, B. K., Ghosh, A., Gorce, A., Gorthi, D., Halday, Z., Hazelton, B. J., Hewitt, J. N., Hickish, J., Huang, T., Jacobs, D. C., Josaitis, A., Kerrigan, J., Kittiwisit, P., Kolopanis, M., Lanman, A., Liu, A., Ma, Y. -Z., MacMahon, D. H. E., Malan, L., Malgas, K., Malgas, C., Marero, B., Martinot, Z. E., McBride, L., Mesinger, A., Mohamed-Hinds, N., Molewa, M., Morales, M. F., Murray, S., Nikolic, B., Nuwegeld, H., Parsons, A. R., Patra, N., Plante, P. L., Qin, Y., Rath, E., Razavi-Ghods, N., Riley, D., Robnett, J., Rosie, K., Santos, M. G., Sims, P., Singh, S., Storer, D., Swarts, H., Tan, J., Wilensky, M. J., Williams, P. K. G., Wyngaarden, P. v., and Zheng, H.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The 21 cm transition from neutral Hydrogen promises to be the best observational probe of the Epoch of Reionisation (EoR). This has led to the construction of low-frequency radio interferometric arrays, such as the Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array (HERA), aimed at systematically mapping this emission for the first time. Precision calibration, however, is a requirement in 21 cm radio observations. Due to the spatial compactness of HERA, the array is prone to the effects of mutual coupling, which inevitably lead to non-smooth calibration errors that contaminate the data. When unsmooth gains are used in calibration, intrinsically spectrally-smooth foreground emission begins to contaminate the data in a way that can prohibit a clean detection of the cosmological EoR signal. In this paper, we show that the effects of mutual coupling on calibration quality can be reduced by applying custom time-domain filters to the data prior to calibration. We find that more robust calibration solutions are derived when filtering in this way, which reduces the observed foreground power leakage. Specifically, we find a reduction of foreground power leakage by 2 orders of magnitude at k=0.5.
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- 2024
3. Investigating Mutual Coupling in the Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array and Mitigating its Effects on the 21-cm Power Spectrum
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Rath, E., Pascua, R., Josaitis, A. T., Ewall-Wice, A., Fagnoni, N., Acedo, E. de Lera, Martinot, Z. E., Abdurashidova, Z., Adams, T., Aguirre, J. E., Baartman, R., Beardsley, A. P., Berkhout, L. M., Bernardi, G., Billings, T. S., Bowman, J. D., Bull, P., Burba, J., Byrne, R., Carey, S., Chen, K. -F., Choudhuri, S., Cox, T., DeBoer, D. R., Dexter, M., Dillon, J. S., Dynes, S., Eksteen, N., Ely, J., Fritz, R., Furlanetto, S. R., Gale-Sides, K., Garsden, H., Gehlot, B. K., Ghosh, A., Gorce, A., Gorthi, D., Halday, Z., Hazelton, B. J., Hewitt, J. N., Hickish, J., Huang, T., Jacobs, D. C., Kern, N. S., Kerrigan, J., Kittiwisit, P., Kolopanis, M., Lanman, A., Liu, A., Ma, Y. -Z., MacMahon, D. H. E., Malan, L., Malgas, C., Malgas, K., Marero, B., McBride, L., Mesinger, A., Mohamed-Hinds, N., Molewa, M., Morales, M. F., Murray, S. G., Nikolic, B., Nuwegeld, H., Parsons, A. R., Patra, N., La Plante, P., Qin, Y., Razavi-Ghods, N., Riley, D., Robnett, J., Rosie, K., Santos, M. G., Sims, P., Singh, S., Storer, D., Swarts, H., Tan, J., Wilensky, M. J., Williams, P. K. G., van Wyngaarden, P., and Zheng, H.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Interferometric experiments designed to detect the highly redshifted 21-cm signal from neutral hydrogen are producing increasingly stringent constraints on the 21-cm power spectrum, but some k-modes remain systematics-dominated. Mutual coupling is a major systematic that must be overcome in order to detect the 21-cm signal, and simulations that reproduce effects seen in the data can guide strategies for mitigating mutual coupling. In this paper, we analyse 12 nights of data from the Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array and compare the data against simulations that include a computationally efficient and physically motivated semi-analytic treatment of mutual coupling. We find that simulated coupling features qualitatively agree with coupling features in the data; however, coupling features in the data are brighter than the simulated features, indicating the presence of additional coupling mechanisms not captured by our model. We explore the use of fringe-rate filters as mutual coupling mitigation tools and use our simulations to investigate the effects of mutual coupling on a simulated cosmological 21-cm power spectrum in a "worst case" scenario where the foregrounds are particularly bright. We find that mutual coupling contaminates a large portion of the "EoR Window", and the contamination is several orders-of-magnitude larger than our simulated cosmic signal across a wide range of cosmological Fourier modes. While our fiducial fringe-rate filtering strategy reduces mutual coupling by roughly a factor of 100 in power, a non-negligible amount of coupling cannot be excised with fringe-rate filters, so more sophisticated mitigation strategies are required., Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures, submitted to MNRAS
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- 2024
4. The 3He(\vec n,p)3H parity-conserving asymmetry
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Viviani, M., Baeßler, S., Barrón-Palos, L., Birge, N., Bowman, J. D., Calarco, J., Cianciolo, V., Coppola, C. E., Crawford, C. B., Dodson, G., Fomin, N., Garishvili, I., Gericke, M. T., Girlanda, L., Greene, G. L., Hale, G. M., Hamblen, J., Hayes, C., Iverson, E. B., Kabir, M. L., Kievsky, A., Marcucci, L. E., McCrea, M., Plemons, E., Ramírez-Morales, A., Mueller, P. E., Novikov, I., Penttila, S. I., Scott, E. M., Watts, J., and Wickersham, C.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
Recently, the n$^3$He collaboration reported a measurement of the parity-violating (PV) proton directional asymmetry $A_{\mathrm {PV}} = (1.55\pm 0.97~\mathrm {(st\ at)} \pm 0.24~\mathrm {(sys)})\times 10^{-8}$ in the capture reaction of ${}^3$He$(\vec {n},{\mathrm p}){}^3$H at meV incident neutron energies. The result increased the limited inventory of precisely measured and calculable PV observables in few-body systems required to further understand the structure of hadronic weak interaction. In this letter, we report the experimental and theoretical investigation of a parity conserving (PC) asymmetry $A_{\mathrm {PC}}$ in the same reaction (the first ever measured PC observable at meV neutron energies). As a result of S- and P-wave mixing in the reaction, the $A_{\mathrm {PC}}$ is inversely proportional to the neutron wavelength $\lambda$. The experimental value is $(\lambda\times A_{\mathrm {PC}})\equiv\beta= (-1.97 \pm 0.28~\mathrm{(stat)}\pm 0.12~\mathrm{(sys)}) \times 10^{-6}$ Amstrongs. We present results for a theoretical analysis of this reaction by solving the four-body scattering problem within the hyperspherical harmonic method. We find that in the ${}^3$He$(\vec {n},{\mathrm p}){}^3$H reaction, $A_{\mathrm {PC}}$ depends critically on the energy and width of the close $0^-$ resonant state of ${}^4$He, resulting in a large sensitivity to the spin-orbit components of the nucleon-nucleon force and even to the three-nucleon force. The analysis of the accurately measured $A_{\mathrm {PC}}$ and $A_{\mathrm {PV}}$ using the same few-body theoretical models gives essential information needed to interpret the PV asymmetry in the ${}^3$He$(\vec {n}, {\mathrm p}){}^3$H reaction., Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures
- Published
- 2024
5. Fundamental Neutron Physics: a White Paper on Progress and Prospects in the US
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Alarcon, R., Aleksandrova, A., Baeßler, S., Beck, D. H., Bhattacharya, T., Blatnik, M., Bowles, T. J., Bowman, J. D., Brewington, J., Broussard, L. J., Bryant, A., Burdine, J. F., Caylor, J., Chen, Y., Choi, J. H., Christie, L., Chupp, T. E., Cianciolo, V., Cirigliano, V., Clayton, S. M., Collett, B., Crawford, C., Dekens, W., Demarteau, M., DeMille, D., Dodson, G., Filippone, B. W., Floyd, N., Fomin, N., Fry, J, Fuyuto, K., Gardner, S., Godri, R., Golub, R., Gonzalez, F., Greene, G. L., Gudkov, V., Gupta, R., Hamblen, J., Hayen, L., Hendrus, J C., Hickerson, K., Hills, F. B., Holley, A. T., Hoogerheide, S., Hubert, M., Huffman, P. R., Imam, S. K., Ito, T. M., Jin, L., Jones, G., Komives, A., Korobkina, E., Korsch, W., Leung, K. K. H., Liu, C. -Y., Liu, K. -F., Long, J. C., Mathews, D., Mendelsohn, A., Mereghetti, E., Mohanmurthy, P., Morris, C. L., Mueller, P., Mumm, H. P., Nelsen, A., Nicholson, A., Nico, J., O'Shaughnessy, C. M., Palamure, P. A., Pastore, S., Pattie Jr., R. W., Phan, N. S., Pioquinto, J. A., Plaster, B., Počanić, D., Rahangdale, H., Redwine, R., Reid, A., Salvat, D. J., Saunders, A., Schaper, D., Seng, C. -Y., Singh, M., Shindler, A., Snow, W. M., Tang, Z., Walker-Loud, A., Wong, D. K. -T., Wietfeldt, F., and Young, A. R.
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Nuclear Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
Fundamental neutron physics, combining precision measurements and theory, probes particle physics at short range with reach well beyond the highest energies probed by the LHC. Significant US efforts are underway that will probe BSM CP violation with orders of magnitude more sensitivity, provide new data on the Cabibbo anomaly, more precisely measure the neutron lifetime and decay, and explore hadronic parity violation. World-leading results from the US Fundamental Neutron Physics community since the last Long Range Plan, include the world's most precise measurement of the neutron lifetime from UCN$\tau$, the final results on the beta-asymmetry from UCNA and new results on hadronic parity violation from the NPDGamma and n-${^3}$He runs at the FNPB (Fundamental Neutron Physics Beamline), precision measurement of the radiative neutron decay mode and n-${}^4$He at NIST. US leadership and discovery potential are ensured by the development of new high-impact experiments including BL3, Nab, LANL nEDM and nEDM@SNS. On the theory side, the last few years have seen results for the neutron EDM from the QCD $\theta$ term, a factor of two reduction in the uncertainty for inner radiative corrections in beta-decay which impacts CKM unitarity, and progress on {\it ab initio} calculations of nuclear structure for medium-mass and heavy nuclei which can eventually improve the connection between nuclear and nucleon EDMs. In order to maintain this exciting program and capitalize on past investments while also pursuing new ideas and building US leadership in new areas, the Fundamental Neutron Physics community has identified a number of priorities and opportunities for our sub-field covering the time-frame of the last Long Range Plan (LRP) under development. This white paper elaborates on these priorities., Comment: arXiv admin note: text overlap with arXiv:2304.03451
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- 2023
6. Measurement of the Parity-Odd Angular Distribution of Gamma Rays From Polarized Neutron Capture on $^{35}$Cl
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Fomin, N., Alarcon, R., Alonzi, L., Askanazi, E., Baeßler, S., Balascuta, S., Barrón-Palos, L., Barzilov, A., Blyth, D., Bowman, J. D., Birge, N., Calarco, J. R., Chupp, T. E., Cianciolo, V., Coppola, C. E., Crawford, C. B., Craycraft, K., Evans, D., Fieseler, C., Frlež, E., Fry, J., Garishvili, I., Gericke, M. T. W., Gillis, R. C., Grammer, K. B., Greene, G. L., Hall, J., Hamblen, J., Hayes, C., Iverson, E. B., Kabir, M. L., Kucuker, S., Lauss, B., Mahurin, R., McCrea, M., Maldonado-Velázquez, M., Masuda, Y., Mei, J., Milburn, R., Mueller, P. E., Musgrave, M., Nann, H., Novikov, I., Parsons, D., Penttilä, S. I., Počanić, D., Ramirez-Morales, A., Root, M., Salas-Bacci, A., Santra, S., Schröder, S., Scott, E., Seo, P. -N., Sharapov, E. I., Simmons, F., Snow, W. M., Sprow, A., Stewart, J., Tang, E., Tang, Z., Tong, X., Turkoglu, D. J., Whitehead, R., and Wilburn, W. S.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Nuclear Theory - Abstract
We report a measurement of two energy-weighted gamma cascade angular distributions from polarized slow neutron capture on the ${}^{35}$Cl nucleus, one parity-odd correlation proportional to $\vec{s_{n}} \cdot \vec{k_{\gamma}}$ and one parity-even correlation proportional to $\vec{s_{n}} \cdot \vec{k_{n}} \times \vec{k_{\gamma}}$. A parity violating asymmetry can appear in this reaction due to the weak nucleon-nucleon (NN) interaction which mixes opposite parity S and P-wave levels in the excited compound $^{36}$Cl nucleus formed upon slow neutron capture. If parity-violating (PV) and parity-conserving (PC) terms both exist, the measured differential cross section can be related to them via $\frac{d\sigma}{d\Omega}\propto1+A_{\gamma, PV}\cos\theta+A_{\gamma,PC}\sin\theta$. The PV and PC asymmetries for energy-weighted gamma cascade angular distributions for polarized slow neutron capture on $^{35}$Cl averaged over the neutron energies from 2.27~meV to 9.53~meV were measured to be $A_{\gamma,PV}=(-23.9\pm0.7)\times 10^{-6}$ and $A_{\gamma,PC}=(0.1\pm0.7)\times 10^{-6}$. These results are consistent with previous experimental results. Systematic errors were quantified and shown to be small compared to the statistical error. These asymmetries in the angular distributions of the gamma rays emitted from the capture of polarized neutrons in $^{35}$Cl were used to verify the operation and data analysis procedures for the NPDGamma experiment which measured the parity-odd asymmetry in the angular distribution of gammas from polarized slow neutron capture on protons.
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- 2022
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7. Microbial metabolomic responses to changes in temperature and salinity along the western Antarctic Peninsula
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Dawson, H. M., Connors, E., Erazo, N. G., Sacks, J. S., Mierzejewski, V., Rundell, S. M., Carlson, L. T., Deming, J. W., Ingalls, A. E., Bowman, J. S., and Young, J. N.
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- 2023
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8. Epoch of Reionization Power Spectrum Limits from Murchison Widefield Array Data Targeted at EoR1 Field
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Rahimi, M., Pindor, B., Line, J. L. B., Barry, N., Trott, C. M., Webster, R. L., Jordan, C. H., Wilensky, M., Yoshiura, S., Beardsley, A., Bowman, J., Byrne, R., Chokshi, A., Hazelton, B. J., Hasegawa, K., Howard, E., Greig, B., Jacobs, D., Joseph, R., Kolopanis, M., Lynch, C., McKinley, B., Mitchell, D. A., Murray, S., Morales, M. F., Pober, J. C., Takahashi, K., Tingay, S. J., Wayth, R. B., Wyithe, J. S. B., and Zheng, Q.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Current attempts to measure the 21cm Power Spectrum of neutral hydrogen during the Epoch of Reionization are limited by systematics which produce measured upper limits above both the thermal noise and the expected cosmological signal. These systematics arise from a combination of observational, instrumental, and analysis effects. In order to further understand and mitigate these effects, it is instructive to explore different aspects of existing datasets. One such aspect is the choice of observing field. To date, MWA EoR observations have largely focused on the EoR0 field. In this work, we present a new detailed analysis of the EoR1 field. The EoR1 field is one of the coldest regions of the Southern radio sky, but contains the very bright radio galaxy Fornax-A. The presence of this bright extended source in the primary beam of the interferometer makes the calibration and analysis of EoR1 particularly challenging. We demonstrate the effectiveness of a recently developed shapelet model of Fornax-A in improving the results from this field. We also describe and apply a series of data quality metrics which identify and remove systematically contaminated data. With substantially improved source models, upgraded analysis algorithms and enhanced data quality metrics, we determine EoR power spectrum upper limits based on analysis of the best $\sim$14-hours data observed during 2015 and 2014 at redshifts 6.5, 6.8 and 7.1, with the lowest $2\sigma$ upper limit at z=6.5 of $\Delta^2 \leq (73.78 ~\mathrm{mK)^2}$ at $k=0.13~\mathrm{h~ Mpc^{-1}}$, improving on previous EoR1 measurement results., Comment: 18 pages, 17 figures, Accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2021
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9. Constraining the 21cm brightness temperature of the IGM at $z$=6.6 around LAEs with the Murchison Widefield Array
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Trott, Cathryn M., Jordan, C. H., Line, J. L. B., Lynch, C. R., Yoshiura, S., McKinley, B., Dayal, P., Pindor, B., Hutter, A., Takahashi, K., Wayth, R. B., Barry, N., Beardsley, A., Bowman, J., Byrne, R., Chokshi, A., Greig, B., Hasegawa, K., Hazelton, B. J., Howard, E., Jacobs, D., Kolopanis, M., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Murray, S., Pober, J. C., Rahimi, M., Tingay, S. J., Webster, R. L., Wilensky, M., Wyithe, J. S. B., and Zheng, Q.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The locations of Ly-$\alpha$ emitting galaxies (LAEs) at the end of the Epoch of Reionisation (EoR) are expected to correlate with regions of ionised hydrogen, traced by the redshifted 21~cm hyperfine line. Mapping the neutral hydrogen around regions with detected and localised LAEs offers an avenue to constrain the brightness temperature of the Universe within the EoR by providing an expectation for the spatial distribution of the gas, thereby providing prior information unavailable to power spectrum measurements. We use a test set of 12 hours of observations from the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) in extended array configuration, to constrain the neutral hydrogen signature of 58 LAEs, detected with the Subaru Hypersuprime Cam in the \textit{Silverrush} survey, centred on $z$=6.58. We assume that detectable emitters reside in the centre of ionised HII bubbles during the end of reionization, and predict the redshifted neutral hydrogen signal corresponding to the remaining neutral regions using a set of different ionised bubble radii. A prewhitening matched filter detector is introduced to assess detectability. We demonstrate the ability to detect, or place limits upon, the amplitude of brightness temperature fluctuations, and the characteristic HII bubble size. With our limited data, we constrain the brightness temperature of neutral hydrogen to $\Delta{\rm T}_B<$30 mK ($<$200 mK) at 95% (99%) confidence for lognormally-distributed bubbles of radii, $R_B =$ 15$\pm$2$h^{-1}$cMpc., Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
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- 2021
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10. A new MWA limit on the 21 cm Power Spectrum at Redshifts $\sim$ 13 $-$ 17
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Yoshiura, S., Pindor, B., Line, J. L. B., Barry, N., Trott, C. M., Beardsley, A., Bowman, J., Byrne, R., Chokshi, A., Hazelton, B. J., Hasegawa, K., Howard, E., Greig, B., Jacobs, D., Jordan, C. H., Joseph, R., Kolopanis, M., Lynch, C., McKinley, B., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Murray, S. G., Pober, J. C., Rahimi, M., Takahashi, K., Tingay, S. J., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Wilensky, M., Wyithe, J. S. B., Zhang, Z., and Zheng, Q.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Observations in the lowest MWA band between $75-100$ MHz have the potential to constrain the distribution of neutral hydrogen in the intergalactic medium at redshift $\sim 13-17$. Using 15 hours of MWA data, we analyse systematics in this band such as radio-frequency interference (RFI), ionospheric and wide field effects. By updating the position of point sources, we mitigate the direction independent calibration error due to ionospheric offsets. Our calibration strategy is optimized for the lowest frequency bands by reducing the number of direction dependent calibrators and taking into account radio sources within a wider field of view. We remove data polluted by systematics based on the RFI occupancy and ionospheric conditions, finally selecting 5.5 hours of the cleanest data. Using these data, we obtain two sigma upper limits on the 21 cm power spectrum in the range of $0.1\lessapprox k \lessapprox 1 ~\rm ~h~Mpc^{-1}$ and at $z$=14.2, 15.2 and 16.5, with the lowest limit being $6.3\times 10^6 ~\rm mK^2$ at $\rm k=0.14 \rm ~h~Mpc^{-1}$ and at $z=15.2$ with a possibility of a few \% of signal loss due to direction independent calibration., Comment: 17 pages, 18 figures, accepted to MNRAS
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- 2021
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11. Global 21-cm Cosmology from the Farside of the Moon
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Burns, Jack, Bale, Stuart, Bradley, Richard, Ahmed, Z., Allen, S. W., Bowman, J., Furlanetto, S., MacDowall, R., Mirocha, J., Nhan, B., Pivovaroff, M., Pulupa, M., Rapetti, D., Slosar, A., and Tauscher, K.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
One of the last unexplored windows to the cosmos, the Dark Ages and Cosmic Dawn, can be opened using a simple low frequency radio telescope from the stable, quiet lunar farside to measure the Global 21-cm spectrum. This frontier remains an enormous gap in our knowledge of the Universe. Standard models of physics and cosmology are untested during this critical epoch. The messenger of information about this period is the 1420 MHz (21-cm) radiation from the hyperfine transition of neutral hydrogen, Doppler-shifted to low radio astronomy frequencies by the expansion of the Universe. The Global 21-cm spectrum uniquely probes the cosmological model during the Dark Ages plus the evolving astrophysics during Cosmic Dawn, yielding constraints on the first stars, on accreting black holes, and on exotic physics such as dark matter-baryon interactions. A single low frequency radio telescope can measure the Global spectrum between ~10-110 MHz because of the ubiquity of neutral hydrogen. Precise characterizations of the telescope and its surroundings are required to detect this weak, isotropic emission of hydrogen amidst the bright foreground Galactic radiation. We describe how two antennas will permit observations over the full frequency band: a pair of orthogonal wire antennas and a 0.3-m$^3$ patch antenna. A four-channel correlation spectropolarimeter forms the core of the detector electronics. Technology challenges include advanced calibration techniques to disentangle covariances between a bright foreground and a weak 21-cm signal, using techniques similar to those for the CMB, thermal management for temperature swings of >250C, and efficient power to allow operations through a two-week lunar night. This simple telescope sets the stage for a lunar farside interferometric array to measure the Dark Ages power spectrum.
- Published
- 2021
12. First Precision Measurement of the Parity Violating Asymmetry in Cold Neutron Capture on $^3$He
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n3He Collaboration, Gericke, M. T., Baeßler, S., Barrón-Palos, L., Birge, N., Bowman, J. D., Britton Jr., C., Calarco, J., Cianciolo, V., Coppola, C. E., Crawford, C. B., Ezell, D., Fomin, N., Garishvili, I., Greene, G. L., Hale, G. M., Hamblen, J., Hayes, C., Iverson, E., Kabir, M. L., McCrea, M., Mueller, P. E., Novikov, I., Penttila, S., Plemons, E., Ramírez-Morales, A., Scott, E. M., Watts, J., and Wickersham, C.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
We report the first precision measurement of the parity-violating asymmetry in the direction of proton emission with respect to the neutron spin, in the reaction $^{3}\mathrm{He}(\mathrm{n},\mathrm{p})^{3}\mathrm{H}$, using the capture of polarized cold neutrons in an unpolarized active $^3\rm{He}$ target. The asymmetry is a result of the weak interaction between nucleons, which remains one of the most poorly understood aspects of electro-weak theory. The measurement provides an important benchmark for modern effective field theory (EFT) calculations. Measurements like this are necessary to determine the spin-isospin structure of the hadronic weak interaction. Our asymmetry result is $A_{PV} = \left( 1.58 \pm 0.97 ~\mathrm{(stat)} \pm 0.24~\mathrm{(sys)}\right)\times10^{-8}$, which has the smallest uncertainty of any parity-violating asymmetry measurement so far.
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- 2020
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13. The n$^3$He Experiment: Parity Violation in Polarized Neutron Capture on $^{3}$He
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n3He Collaboration, McCrea, M., Kabir, M. L., Birge, N., Coppola, C. E., Hayes, C., Plemons, E., Ramírez-Morales, A., Scott, E. M., Watts, J., Baessler, S., Barrón-Palos, L., Bowman, J. D., Britton Jr., C., Calarco, J., Cianciolo, V., Crawford, C. B., Ezell, D., Fomin, N., Garishvili, I., Gericke, M. T., Greene, G. L., Hale, G. M., Hamblen, J., Iverson, E., Mueller, P. E., Novikov, I., Penttila, S., and Wickersham, C.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
Significant progress has been made to experimentally determine a complete set of the parity-violating (PV) weak-interaction amplitudes between nucleons. In this paper we describe the design, construction and operation of the n$^3$He experiment that was used to measure the PV asymmetry $A_{\mathrm{PV}}$ in the direction of proton emission in the reaction $\vec{\mathrm{n}} + {^3}\mathrm{He} \rightarrow {^3}\mathrm{H} + \mathrm{p}$, using the capture of polarized cold neutrons in an unpolarized gaseous $^3\mathrm{He}$ target. This asymmetry has was recently calculated \cite{Viviani,Viviani2}, both in the traditional style meson exchange picture, and in effective field theory (EFT), including two-pion exchange. The high precision result (published separately) obtained with the experiment described herein forms an important benchmark for hadronic PV (HPV) theory in few-body systems, where precise calculations are possible. To this day, HPV is still one of the most poorly understood aspects of the electro-weak theory. The calculations estimate the size of the asymmetry to be in the range of $(-9.4 \rightarrow 3.5)\times 10^{-8}$, depending on the framework or model. The small size of the asymmetry and the small overall goal uncertainty of the experiment of $\delta A_{\mathrm{PV}} \simeq 1\times10^{-8}$ places strict requirements on the experiment, especially on the design of the target-detector chamber. In this paper we describe the experimental setup and the measurement methodology as well as the detailed design of the chamber, including results of Garfield++ and Geant4 simulations that form the basis of the chamber design and analysis. We also show data from commissioning and production and define the systematic errors that the chamber contributes to the measured $A_{\mathrm{PV}}$. We give the final uncertainty on the measurement.
- Published
- 2020
14. Deep multi-redshift limits on Epoch of Reionisation 21cm Power Spectra from Four Seasons of Murchison Widefield Array Observations
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Trott, Cathryn M., Jordan, C. H., Midgley, S., Barry, N., Greig, B., Pindor, B., Cook, J. H., Sleap, G., Tingay, S. J., Ung, D., Hancock, P., Williams, A., Bowman, J., Byrne, R., Chokshi, A., Hazelton, B. J., Hasegawa, K., Jacobs, D., Joseph, R. C., Li, W., Line, J. L. B, Lynch, C., McKinley, B., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Ouchi, M., Pober, J. C., Rahimi, M., Takahashi, K., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Wilensky, M., Wyithe, J. S. B., Yoshiura, S., Zhang, Z., and Zheng, Q.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We compute the spherically-averaged power spectrum from four seasons of data obtained for the Epoch of Reionisation (EoR) project observed with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA). We measure the EoR power spectrum over $k= 0.07-3.0~h$Mpc$^{-1}$ at redshifts $z=6.5-8.7$. The largest aggregation of 110 hours on EoR0 high-band (3,340 observations), yields a lowest measurement of (43~mK)$^2$ = 1.8$\times$10$^3$ mK$^2$ at $k$=0.14~$h$Mpc$^{-1}$ and $z=6.5$ (2$\sigma$ thermal noise plus sample variance). Using the Real-Time System to calibrate and the CHIPS pipeline to estimate power spectra, we select the best observations from the central five pointings within the 2013--2016 observing seasons, observing three independent fields and in two frequency bands. This yields 13,591 2-minute snapshots (453 hours), based on a quality assurance metric that measures ionospheric activity. We perform another cut to remove poorly-calibrated data, based on power in the foreground-dominated and EoR-dominated regions of the two-dimensional power spectrum, reducing the set to 12,569 observations (419 hours). These data are processed in groups of 20 observations, to retain the capacity to identify poor data, and used to analyse the evolution and structure of the data over field, frequency, and data quality. We subsequently choose the cleanest 8,935 observations (298 hours of data) to form integrated power spectra over the different fields, pointings and redshift ranges., Comment: 19 pages, 29 figures, accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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- 2020
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15. First Season MWA Phase II EoR Power Spectrum Results at Redshift 7
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Li, W., Pober, J. C., Barry, N., Hazelton, B. J., Morales, M. F., Trott, C. M., Lanman, A., Wilensky, M., Sullivan, I., Beardsley, A. P., Booler, T., Bowman, J. D., Byrne, R., Crosse, B., Emrich, D., Franzen, T. M. O., Hasegawa, K., Horsley, L., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Jacobs, D. C., Jordan, C. H., Joseph, R. C., Kaneuji, T., Kaplan, D. L., Kenney, D., Kubota, K., Line, J., Lynch, C., McKinley, B., Mitchell, D. A., Murray, S., Pallot, D., Pindor, B., Rahimi, M., Riding, J., Sleap, G., Steele, K., Takahashi, K., Tingay, S. J., Walker, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., Wu, C., Wyithe, J. S. B., Yoshiura, S., and Zheng, Q.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The compact configuration of Phase II of the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) consists of both a redundant subarray and pseudo-random baselines, offering unique opportunities to perform sky-model and redundant interferometric calibration. The highly redundant hexagonal cores give improved power spectrum sensitivity. In this paper, we present the analysis of nearly 40 hours of data targeting one of the MWA's EoR fields observed in 2016. We use both improved analysis techniques presented in Barry et al. (2019) as well as several additional techniques developed for this work, including data quality control methods and interferometric calibration approaches. We show the EoR power spectrum limits at redshift 6.5, 6.8 and 7.1 based on our deep analysis on this 40-hour data set. These limits span a range in $k$ space of $0.18$ $h$ $\mathrm{Mpc^{-1}}$ $
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- 2019
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16. Science with the Murchison Widefield Array: Phase I Results and Phase II Opportunities
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Beardsley, A. P., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Trott, C. M., Pober, J. C., Morgan, J., Oberoi, D., Kaplan, D. L., Lynch, C. R., Anderson, G. E., McCauley, P. I., Croft, S., James, C. W., Wong, O. I., Tremblay, C. D., Norris, R. P., Cairns, I. H., Lonsdale, C. J., Hancock, P. J., Gaensler, B. M., Bhat, N. D. R., Li, W., Hurley-Walker, N., Callingham, J. R., Seymour, N., Yoshiura, S., Joseph, R. C., Takahashi, K., Sokolowski, M., Miller-Jones, J. C. A., Chauhan, J. V., Bojičić, I., Filipović, M. D., Leahy, D., Su, H., Tian, W. W., McSweeney, S. J., Meyers, B. W., Kitaeff, S., Vernstrom, T., Gürkan, G., Heald, G., Xue, M., Riseley, C. J., Duchesne, S. W., Bowman, J. D., Jacobs, D. C., Crosse, B., Emrich, D., Franzen, T. M. O., Horsley, L., Kenney, D., Morales, M. F., Pallot, D., Steele, K., Tingay, S. J., Walker, M., Wayth, R. B., Williams, A., and Wu, C.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is an open access telescope dedicated to studying the low frequency (80$-$300 MHz) southern sky. Since beginning operations in mid 2013, the MWA has opened a new observational window in the southern hemisphere enabling many science areas. The driving science objectives of the original design were to observe 21\,cm radiation from the Epoch of Reionisation (EoR), explore the radio time domain, perform Galactic and extragalactic surveys, and monitor solar, heliospheric, and ionospheric phenomena. All together 60$+$ programs recorded 20,000 hours producing 146 papers to date. In 2016 the telescope underwent a major upgrade resulting in alternating compact and extended configurations. Other upgrades, including digital back-ends and a rapid-response triggering system, have been developed since the original array was commissioned. In this paper we review the major results from the prior operation of the MWA, and then discuss the new science paths enabled by the improved capabilities. We group these science opportunities by the four original science themes, but also include ideas for directions outside these categories., Comment: 38 pages, 12 figures, accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2019
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17. Improving the Epoch of Reionization Power Spectrum Results from Murchison Widefield Array Season 1 Observations
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Barry, N., Wilensky, M., Trott, C. M., Pindor, B., Beardsley, A. P., Hazelton, B. J., Sullivan, I. S., Morales, M. F., Pober, J. C., Line, J., Greig, B., Byrne, R., Lanman, A., Li, W., Jordan, C. H., Joseph, R. C., McKinley, B., Rahimi, M., Yoshiura, S., Bowman, J. D., Gaensler, B. M., Hewitt, J. N., Jacobs, D. C., Mitchell, D. A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Sethi, S. K., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Webster, R. L., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Measurements of 21 cm Epoch of Reionization (EoR) structure are subject to systematics originating from both the analysis and the observation conditions. Using 2013 data from the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA), we show the importance of mitigating both sources of contamination. A direct comparison between results from Beardsley et al. 2016 and our updated analysis demonstrates new precision techniques, lowering analysis systematics by a factor of 2.8 in power. We then further lower systematics by excising observations contaminated by ultra-faint RFI, reducing by an additional factor of 3.8 in power for the zenith pointing. With this enhanced analysis precision and newly developed RFI mitigation, we calculate a noise-dominated upper limit on the EoR structure of $\Delta^2 \leq 3.9 \times 10^3$ mK$^2$ at $k=0.20$ $\textit{h}$ Mpc$^{-1}$ and $z=7$ using 21 hr of data, improving previous MWA limits by almost an order of magnitude., Comment: 21 pages, 10 figures, published in ApJ, updated title and text
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- 2019
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18. Dark Cosmology: Investigating Dark Matter & Exotic Physics in the Dark Ages using the Redshifted 21-cm Global Spectrum
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Burns, Jack O., Bale, S., Bassett, N., Bowman, J., Bradley, R., Fialkov, A., Furlanetto, S., Hecht, M., Klein-Wolt, M., Lonsdale, C., MacDowall, R., Mirocha, J., Munoz, Julian B., Nhan, B., Pober, J., Rapetti, D., Rogers, A., and Tauscher, K.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The Dark Ages, probed by the redshifted 21-cm signal, is the ideal epoch for a new rigorous test of the standard LCDM cosmological model. Divergences from that model would indicate new physics, such as dark matter decay (heating) or baryonic cooling beyond that expected from adiabatic expansion of the Universe. In the early Universe, most of the baryonic matter was in the form of neutral hydrogen (HI), detectable via its ground state's spin-flip transition. A measurement of the redshifted 21-cm spectrum maps the history of the HI gas through the Dark Ages and Cosmic Dawn and up to the Epoch of Reionization (EoR). The Experiment to Detect the Global EoR Signature (EDGES) recently reported an absorption trough at 78 MHz (redshift z of 17), similar in frequency to expectations for Cosmic Dawn, but about 3 times deeper than was thought possible from standard cosmology and adiabatic cooling of HI. Interactions between baryons and slightly-charged dark matter particles with electron-like mass provide a potential explanation of this difference but other cooling mechanisms are also being investigated to explain these results. The Cosmic Dawn trough is affected by cosmology and the complex astrophysical history of the first luminous objects. Another trough is expected during the Dark Ages, prior to the formation of the first stars and thus determined entirely by cosmological phenomena (including dark matter). Observations on or in orbit above the Moon's farside can investigate this pristine epoch (15-40 MHz; z=100-35), which is inaccessible from Earth. A single cross-dipole antenna or compact array can measure the amplitude of the 21-cm spectrum to the level required to distinguish (at >5$\sigma$}) the standard cosmological model from that of additional cooling derived from current EDGES results. This observation constitutes a powerful, clean probe of exotic physics in the Dark Ages., Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, Science whitepaper submitted to the Astro2020 Decadal Survey
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- 2019
19. Using Nab to determine correlations in unpolarized neutron decay
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Broussard, L. J., Baeßler, S., Bailey, T. L., Birge, N., Bowman, J. D., Crawford, C. B., Cude-Woods, C., Fellers, D. E., Fomin, N., Frlež, E., Gericke, M. T. W., Hayen, L., Jezghani, A. P., Li, H., Macsai, N., Makela, M. F., Mammei, R. R., Mathews, D., McGaughey, P. L., Mueller, P. E., Počanić, D., Royse, C. A., Salas-Bacci, A., Sjue, S. K. L., Ramsey, J. C., Severijns, N., Smith, E. C., Wexler, J., Whitehead, R. A., Young, A. R., and Zeck, B. A.
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Nuclear Experiment ,Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors - Abstract
The Nab experiment will measure the ratio of the weak axial-vector and vector coupling constants $\lambda=g_A/g_V$ with precision $\delta\lambda/\lambda\sim3\times10^{-4}$ and search for a Fierz term $b_F$ at a level $\Delta b_F<10^{-3}$. The Nab detection system uses thick, large area, segmented silicon detectors to very precisely determine the decay proton's time of flight and the decay electron's energy in coincidence and reconstruct the correlation between the antineutrino and electron momenta. Excellent understanding of systematic effects affecting timing and energy reconstruction using this detection system are required. To explore these effects, a series of ex situ studies have been undertaken, including a search for a Fierz term at a less sensitive level of $\Delta b_F<10^{-2}$ in the beta decay of $^{45}$Ca using the UCNA spectrometer., Comment: Proceedings of the 7th International Syposium on Symmetries in Subatomic Physics SSP2018, Aachen (Germany), 10 - 15 Jun 2018. This is a pre-print of an article published in Hyperfine Interactions. The final authenticated version is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10751-018-1538-7
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- 2018
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20. Food Safety Culture
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Frankish, E., primary, Ross, T., additional, and Bowman, J., additional
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- 2023
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21. The Nab Experiment: A Precision Measurement of Unpolarized Neutron Beta Decay
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Fry, J., Alarcon, R., Baessler, S., Balascuta, S., Barron-Palos, L., Bailey, T., Bass, K., Birge, N., Blose, A., Borissenko, D., Bowman, J. D., Broussard, L. J., Bryant, A. T., Byrne, J., Calarco, J. R., Caylor, J., Chang, K., Chupp, T., Cianciolo, T. V., Crawford, C., Ding, X., Doyle, M., Fan, W., Farrar, W., Fomin, N., Frlez, E., Gericke, M. T., Gervais, M., Gluck, F., Greene, G. L., Grzywacz, R. K., Gudkov, V., Hamblen, J., Hayes, C., Hendrus, C., Ito, T., Jezghani, A., Li, H., Makela, M., Macsai, N., Mammei, J., Mammei, R., Martinez, M., Mathews, D. G., McCrea, M., McGaughey, P., McLaughlin, C. D., Mueller, P., van Petten, D., Penttila, S. I., Perryman, D. E., Picker, R., Pierce, J., Pocanic, D., Qian, Y., Ramsey, J., Randall, G., Riley, G., Rykaczewski, K. P., Salas-Bacci, A., Samiei, S., Scott, E. M., Shelton, T., Sjue, S. K., Smith, A., Smith, E., Stevens, E., Wexler, J., Whitehead, R., Wilburn, W. S., Young, A., and Zeck, B.
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Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Neutron beta decay is one of the most fundamental processes in nuclear physics and provides sensitive means to uncover the details of the weak interaction. Neutron beta decay can evaluate the ratio of axial-vector to vector coupling constants in the standard model, $\lambda = g_A / g_V$, through multiple decay correlations. The Nab experiment will carry out measurements of the electron-neutrino correlation parameter $a$ with a precision of $\delta a / a = 10^{-3}$ and the Fierz interference term $b$ to $\delta b = 3\times10^{-3}$ in unpolarized free neutron beta decay. These results, along with a more precise measurement of the neutron lifetime, aim to deliver an independent determination of the ratio $\lambda$ with a precision of $\delta \lambda / \lambda = 0.03\%$ that will allow an evaluation of $V_{ud}$ and sensitively test CKM unitarity, independent of nuclear models. Nab utilizes a novel, long asymmetric spectrometer that guides the decay electron and proton to two large area silicon detectors in order to precisely determine the electron energy and an estimation of the proton momentum from the proton time of flight. The Nab spectrometer is being commissioned at the Fundamental Neutron Physics Beamline at the Spallation Neutron Source at Oak Ridge National Lab. We present an overview of the Nab experiment and recent updates on the spectrometer, analysis, and systematic effects., Comment: Presented at PPNS2018
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- 2018
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22. The Murchison Widefield Array Transients Survey (MWATS). A search for low frequency variability in a bright Southern hemisphere sample
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Bell, M. E., Murphy, Tara, Hancock, P. J., Callingham, J. R., Johnston, S., Kaplan, D. L., Hunstead, R. W., Sadler, E. M., Croft, S., White, S. V., Hurley-Walker, N., Chhetri, R., Morgan, J. S., Edwards, P. G., Rowlinson, A., Offringa, A. R., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Deshpande, A. A., Gaensler, B. M., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Lonsdale, C. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Prabu, T., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We report on a search for low-frequency radio variability in 944 bright (> 4Jy at 154 MHz) unresolved, extragalactic radio sources monitored monthly for several years with the Murchison Widefield Array. In the majority of sources we find very low levels of variability with typical modulation indices < 5%. We detect 15 candidate low frequency variables that show significant long term variability (>2.8 years) with time-averaged modulation indices M = 3.1 - 7.1%. With 7/15 of these variable sources having peaked spectral energy distributions, and only 5.7% of the overall sample having peaked spectra, we find an increase in the prevalence of variability in this spectral class. We conclude that the variability seen in this survey is most probably a consequence of refractive interstellar scintillation and that these objects must have the majority of their flux density contained within angular diameters less than 50 milli-arcsec (which we support with multi-wavelength data). At 154 MHz we demonstrate that interstellar scintillation time-scales become long (~decades) and have low modulation indices, whilst synchrotron driven variability can only produce dynamic changes on time-scales of hundreds of years, with flux density changes less than one milli-jansky (without relativistic boosting). From this work we infer that the low frequency extra-galactic southern sky, as seen by SKA-Low, will be non-variable on time-scales shorter than one year., Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures
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- 2018
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23. Assessment of ionospheric activity tolerances for Epoch of Reionisation science with the Murchison Widefield Array
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Trott, Cathryn M., Jordan, C. H., Murray, S. G., Pindor, B., Mitchell, D. A., Wayth, R. B., Line, J., McKinley, B., Beardsley, A., Bowman, J., Briggs, F., Hazelton, B. J., Hewitt, J., Jacobs, D., Morales, M. F., Pober, J. C., Sethi, S., Shankar, U., Subrahmanyan, R., Tegmark, M., Tingay, S. J., Webster, R. L., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Structure imprinted in foreground extragalactic point sources by ionospheric refraction has the potential to contaminate Epoch of Reionisation (EoR) power spectra of the 21~cm emission line of neutral hydrogen. The alteration of the spatial and spectral structure of foreground measurements due to total electron content (TEC) gradients in the ionosphere create a departure from the expected sky signal. We present a general framework for understanding the signatures of ionospheric behaviour in the two-dimensional (2D) neutral hydrogen power spectrum measured by a low-frequency radio interferometer. Two primary classes of ionospheric behaviour are considered, corresponding to dominant modes observed in Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) EoR data; namely, anisotropic structured wave behaviour, and isotropic turbulence. Analytic predictions for power spectrum bias due to this contamination are computed, and compared with simulations. We then apply the ionospheric metric described in Jordan et al. (2017) to study the impact of ionospheric structure on MWA data, by dividing MWA EoR datasets into classes with good and poor ionospheric conditions, using sets of matched 30-minute observations from 2014 September. The results are compared with the analytic and simulated predictions, demonstrating the observed bias in the power spectrum when the ionosphere is active (displays coherent structures or isotropic turbulence). The analysis demonstrates that unless ionospheric activity can be quantified and corrected, active data should not be included in EoR analysis in order to avoid systematic biases in cosmological power spectra. When data are corrected with a model formed from the calibration information, bias reduces below the expected 21~cm signal level. Data are considered `quiet' when the median measured source position offsets are less than 10-15~arcseconds., Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal
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- 2018
24. Measuring the global 21-cm signal with the MWA-I: improved measurements of the Galactic synchrotron background using lunar occultation
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McKinley, B., Bernardi, G., Trott, C. M., Line, J. L. B., Wayth, R. B., Offringa, A. R., Pindor, B., Jordan, C. H., Sokolowski, M., Tingay, S. J., Lenc, E., Hurley-Walker, N., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., and Webster, R. L.
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Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present early results from a project to measure the sky-averaged (global), redshifted $21\,$cm signal from the Epoch of Reionisation (EoR), using the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) telescope. Because interferometers are not sensitive to a spatially-invariant global average, they cannot be used to detect this signal using standard techniques. However, lunar occultation of the radio sky imprints a spatial structure on the global signal, allowing us to measure the average brightness temperature of the patch of sky immediately surrounding the Moon. In this paper we present one night of Moon observations with the MWA between 72 - 230 MHz and verify our techniques to extract the background sky temperature from measurements of the Moon's flux density. We improve upon previous work using the lunar occultation technique by using a more sophisticated model for reflected `earthshine' and by employing image differencing to remove imaging artefacts. We leave the Moon's (constant) radio brightness temperature as a free parameter in our fit to the data and as a result, measure $T_{\rm{moon}} = 180 \pm 12 $ K and a Galactic synchrotron spectral index of $-2.64\pm0.14$, at the position of the Moon. Finally, we evaluate the prospects of the lunar occultation technique for a global EoR detection and map out a way forward for future work with the MWA., Comment: 13 pages, 7 figures, accepted in MNRAS
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- 2018
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25. First Observation of $P$-odd $\gamma$ Asymmetry in Polarized Neutron Capture on Hydrogen
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Blyth, D., Fry, J., Fomin, N., Alarcon, R., Alonzi, L., Askanazi, E., Baeßler, S., Balascuta, S., Barrón-Palos, L., Barzilov, A., Bowman, J. D., Birge, N., Calarco, J. R., Chupp, T. E., Cianciolo, V., Coppola, C. E., Crawford, C. B., Craycraft, K., Evans, D., Fieseler, C., Frlež, E., Garishvili, I., Gericke, M. T. W., Gillis, R. C., Grammer, K. B., Greene, G. L., Hall, J., Hamblen, J., Hayes, C., Iverson, E. B., Kabir, M. L., Kucuker, S., Lauss, B., Mahurin, R., McCrea, M., Maldonado-Velázquez, M., Masuda, Y., Mei, J., Milburn, R., Mueller, P. E., Musgrave, M., Nann, H., Novikov, I., Parsons, D., Penttilä, S. I., Počanić, D., Ramirez-Morales, A., Root, M., Salas-Bacci, A., Santra, S., Schröder, S., Scott, E., Seo, P. -N., Sharapov, E. I., Simmons, F., Snow, W. M., Sprow, A., Stewart, J., Tang, E., Tang, Z., Tong, X., Turkoglu, D. J., Whitehead, R., and Wilburn, W. S.
- Subjects
Nuclear Experiment ,High Energy Physics - Experiment - Abstract
We report the first observation of the parity-violating 2.2 MeV gamma-ray asymmetry $A^{np}_\gamma$ in neutron-proton capture using polarized cold neutrons incident on a liquid parahydrogen target at the Spallation Neutron Source at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. $A^{np}_\gamma$ isolates the $\Delta I=1$, \mbox{$^{3}S_{1}\rightarrow {^{3}P_{1}}$} component of the weak nucleon-nucleon interaction, which is dominated by pion exchange and can be directly related to a single coupling constant in either the DDH meson exchange model or pionless EFT. We measured $A^{np}_\gamma = [-3.0 \pm 1.4 (stat) \pm 0.2 (sys)]\times 10^{-8}$, which implies a DDH weak $\pi NN$ coupling of $h_{\pi}^{1} = [2.6 \pm 1.2(stat) \pm 0.2(sys)] \times 10^{-7}$ and a pionless EFT constant of $C^{^{3}S_{1}\rightarrow ^{3}P_{1}}/C_{0}=[-7.4 \pm 3.5 (stat) \pm 0.5 (sys)] \times 10^{-11}$ MeV$^{-1}$. We describe the experiment, data analysis, systematic uncertainties, and the implications of the result., Comment: 6 pages, 5 figures
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- 2018
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26. Comparing Redundant and Sky Model Based Interferometric Calibration: A First Look with Phase II of the MWA
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Li, W., Pober, J. C., Hazelton, B. J., Barry, N., Morales, M. F., Sullivan, I., Parsons, A. R., Ali, Z. S., Dillon, J. S., Beardsley, A. P., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Byrne, R., Carroll, P., Crosse, B., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., Franzen, T. M. O., Hewitt, J. N., Horsley, L., Jacobs, D. C., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Jordan, C., Joseph, R. C., Kaplan, D. L., Kenney, D., Kim, H., Kittiwisit, P., Lanman, A., Line, J., McKinley, B., Mitchell, D. A., Murray, S., Neben, A., Offringa, A. R., Pallot, D., Paul, S., Pindor, B., Procopio, P., Rahimi, M., Riding, J., Sethi, S. K., Shankar, N. Udaya, Steele, K., Subrahmanian, R., Tegmark, M., Thyagarajan, N., Tingay, S. J., Trott, C., Walker, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., Wu, C., and Wyithe, S.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
Interferometric arrays seeking to measure the 21 cm signal from the Epoch of Reionization must contend with overwhelmingly bright emission from foreground sources. Accurate recovery of the 21 cm signal will require precise calibration of the array, and several new avenues for calibration have been pursued in recent years, including methods using redundancy in the antenna configuration. The newly upgraded Phase II of Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is the first interferometer that has large numbers of redundant baselines while retaining good instantaneous UV-coverage. This array therefore provides a unique opportunity to compare redundant calibration with sky-model based algorithms. In this paper, we present the first results from comparing both calibration approaches with MWA Phase II observations. For redundant calibration, we use the package OMNICAL, and produce sky-based calibration solutions with the analysis package Fast Holographic Deconvolution (FHD). There are three principal results. (1) We report the success of OMNICAL on observations of ORBComm satellites, showing substantial agreement between redundant visibility measurements after calibration. (2) We directly compare OMNICAL calibration solutions with those from FHD, and demonstrate these two different calibration schemes give extremely similar results. (3) We explore improved calibration by combining OMNICAL and FHD. We evaluate these combined methods using power spectrum techniques developed for EoR analysis and find evidence for marginal improvements mitigating artifacts in the power spectrum. These results are likely limited by signal-to-noise in the six hours of data used, but suggest future directions for combining these two calibration schemes., Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures. Accepted to ApJ
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- 2018
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27. Measurement of the absolute neutron beam polarization from a supermirror polarizer and the absolute efficiency of a neutron spin rotator for the NPDGamma experiment using a polarized $^{3}$He neutron spin-filter
- Author
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Musgrave, M. M., Baessler, S., Balascuta, S., Barron-Palos, L., Blyth, D., Bowman, J. D., Chupp, T. E., Cianciolo, V., Crawford, C., Craycraft, K., Fomin, N., Fry, J., Gericke, M., Gillis, R. C., Grammer, K., Greene, G. L., Hamblen, J., Hayes, C., Huffman, P., Jiang, C., Kucuker, S., McCrea, M., Mueller, P. E., Penttila, S. I., Snow, W. M., Tang, E., Tang, Z., Tong, X., and Wilburn, W. S.
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Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
Accurately measuring the neutron beam polarization of a high flux, large area neutron beam is necessary for many neutron physics experiments. The Fundamental Neutron Physics Beamline (FnPB) at the Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) is a pulsed neutron beam that was polarized with a supermirror polarizer for the NPDGamma experiment. The polarized neutron beam had a flux of $\sim10^9$ neutrons per second per cm$^2$ and a cross sectional area of 10$\times$12~cm$^2$. The polarization of this neutron beam and the efficiency of a RF neutron spin rotator installed downstream on this beam were measured by neutron transmission through a polarized $^{3}$He neutron spin-filter. The pulsed nature of the SNS enabled us to employ an absolute measurement technique for both quantities which does not depend on accurate knowledge of the phase space of the neutron beam or the $^{3}$He polarization in the spin filter and is therefore of interest for any experiments on slow neutron beams from pulsed neutron sources which require knowledge of the absolute value of the neutron polarization. The polarization and spin-reversal efficiency measured in this work were done for the NPDGamma experiment, which measures the parity violating $\gamma$-ray angular distribution asymmetry with respect to the neutron spin direction in the capture of polarized neutrons on protons. The experimental technique, results, systematic effects, and applications to neutron capture targets are discussed., Comment: 13 pages, 14 figures, 2 tables
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- 2018
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28. Full-dimensional Quantum Dynamics of SiO in Collision with H$_2$
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Yang, Benhui, Zhang, P., Qu, Chen, Wang, X. H., Stancil, P. C., Bowman, J. M., Balakrishnan, N., McLaughlin, B. M., and Forrey, R. C.
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Physics - Chemical Physics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We report the first full-dimensional potential energy surface (PES) and quantum mechanical close-coupling calculations for scattering of SiO due to H$_2$. The full-dimensional interaction potential surface was computed using the explicitly correlated coupled-cluster (CCSD(T)-F12b) method and fitted using an invariant polynomial approach. Pure rotational quenching cross sections from initial states $v_1=0$, $j_1$=1-5 of SiO in collision with H$_2$ are calculated for collision energies between 1.0 and 5000 cm$^{-1}$. State-to-state rotational rate coefficients are calculated at temperatures between 5 and 1000 K. The rotational rate coefficients of SiO with para-H$_2$ are compared with previous approximate results which were obtained using SiO-He PESs or scaled from SiO-He rate coefficients. Rovibrational state-to-state and total quenching cross sections and rate coefficients for initially excited SiO($v_1=1, j_1$=0 and 1) in collisions with para-H$_2$($v_2=0,j_2=0$) and ortho-H$_2$($v_2=0,j_2=1$) were also obtained. The application of the current collisional rate coefficients to astrophysics is briefly discussed.
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- 2018
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29. Ion irradiation induced amorphization of precipitates in Zircaloy
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Bowman, J., Wang, P., Was, G.S., Bachhav, M., and Motta, A.T.
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- 2022
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30. The challenges of low-frequency radio polarimetry: lessons from the Murchison Widefield Array
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Lenc, Emil, Anderson, C. S., Barry, N., Bowman, J. D., Cairns, I. H., Farnes, J. S., Gaensler, B. M., Heald, G., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Lynch, C. R., McCauley, P. I., Mitchell, D. A., Morgan, J., Morales, M. F., Murphy, T., Offringa, A. R., Ord, S. M., Pindor, B., Riseley, C., Sadler, E. M., Sobey, C., Sokolowski, M., Sullivan, I. S., O'Sullivan, S. P., Sun, X. H., Tremblay, S. E., Trott, C. M., and Wayth, R. B.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present techniques developed to calibrate and correct Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) low frequency (72-300 MHz) radio observations for polarimetry. The extremely wide field-of-view, excellent instantaneous (u, v)-coverage and sensitivity to degree-scale structure that the MWA provides enable instrumental calibration, removal of instrumental artefacts, and correction for ionospheric Faraday rotation through imaging techniques. With the demonstrated polarimetric capabilities of the MWA, we discuss future directions for polarimetric science at low frequencies to answer outstanding questions relating to polarised source counts, source depolarisation, pulsar science, low-mass stars, exoplanets, the nature of the interstellar and intergalactic media, and the solar environment., Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in PASA
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- 2017
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31. Spectral energy distribution and radio halo of NGC 253 at low radio frequencies
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Kapinska, A. D., Staveley-Smith, L., Crocker, R., Meurer, G. R., Bhandari, S., Hurley-Walker, N., Offringa, A. R., Hanish, D. J., Seymour, N., Ekers, R. D., Bell, M. E., Callingham, J. R., Dwarakanath, K. S., For, B. -Q., Gaensler, B. M., Hancock, P. J., Hindson, L., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Lenc, E., McKinley, B., Morgan, J., Procopio, P., Wayth, R. B., Wu, C., Zheng, Q., Barry, N., Beardsley, A. P., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Carroll, P., Dillon, J. S., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Hewitt, J. N., Jacobs, D. J., Kim, H. -S., Kittiwisit, P., Line, J., Loeb, A., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Neben, A. R., Paul, S., Pindor, B., Pober, J. C., Riding, J., Sethi, S. K., Shankar, N. Udaya, Subrahmanyan, R., Sullivan, I. S., Tegmark, M., Thyagarajan, N., Tingay, S. J., Trott, C. M., Webster, R. L., Wyithe, S. B., Cappallo, R. J., Deshpande, A. A., Kaplan, D. L., Lonsdale, C. J., McWhirter, S. R., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Prabu, T., Srivani, K. S., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present new radio continuum observations of NGC253 from the Murchison Widefield Array at frequencies between 76 and 227 MHz. We model the broadband radio spectral energy distribution for the total flux density of NGC253 between 76 MHz and 11 GHz. The spectrum is best described as a sum of central starburst and extended emission. The central component, corresponding to the inner 500pc of the starburst region of the galaxy, is best modelled as an internally free-free absorbed synchrotron plasma, with a turnover frequency around 230 MHz. The extended emission component of the NGC253 spectrum is best described as a synchrotron emission flattening at low radio frequencies. We find that 34% of the extended emission (outside the central starburst region) at 1 GHz becomes partially absorbed at low radio frequencies. Most of this flattening occurs in the western region of the SE halo, and may be indicative of synchrotron self-absorption of shock re-accelerated electrons or an intrinsic low-energy cut off of the electron distribution. Furthermore, we detect the large-scale synchrotron radio halo of NGC253 in our radio images. At 154 - 231 MHz the halo displays the well known X-shaped/horn-like structure, and extends out to ~8kpc in z-direction (from major axis)., Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysical Journal on 06 February 2017
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- 2017
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32. A Matched Filter Technique For Slow Radio Transient Detection And First Demonstration With The Murchison Widefield Array
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Feng, L., Vaulin, R., Hewitt, J. N., Remillard, R., Kaplan, D. L., Murphy, Tara, Kudryavtseva, N., Hancock, P., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Deshpande, A. A., Gaensler, B. M., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Lonsdale, C. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Prabu, T., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Many astronomical sources produce transient phenomena at radio frequencies, but the transient sky at low frequencies (<300 MHz) remains relatively unexplored. Blind surveys with new widefield radio instruments are setting increasingly stringent limits on the transient surface density on various timescales. Although many of these instruments are limited by classical confusion noise from an ensemble of faint, unresolved sources, one can in principle detect transients below the classical confusion limit to the extent that the classical confusion noise is independent of time. We develop a technique for detecting radio transients that is based on temporal matched filters applied directly to time series of images rather than relying on source-finding algorithms applied to individual images. This technique has well-defined statistical properties and is applicable to variable and transient searches for both confusion-limited and non-confusion-limited instruments. Using the Murchison Widefield Array as an example, we demonstrate that the technique works well on real data despite the presence of classical confusion noise, sidelobe confusion noise, and other systematic errors. We searched for transients lasting between 2 minutes and 3 months. We found no transients and set improved upper limits on the transient surface density at 182 MHz for flux densities between ~20--200 mJy, providing the best limits to date for hour- and month-long transients., Comment: 16 pages, 14 figures, accepted to AJ
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- 2017
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33. Mitigating calibration errors from mutual coupling with time-domain filtering of 21 cm cosmological radio observations.
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Charles, N, Kern, N S, Pascua, R, Bernardi, G, Bester, L, Smirnov, O, Acedo, E D L, Abdurashidova, Z, Adams, T, Aguirre, J E, Baartman, R, Beardsley, A P, Berkhout, L M, Billings, T S, Bowman, J D, Bull, P, Burba, J, Byrne, R, Carey, S, and Chen, K
- Abstract
The 21 cm transition from neutral Hydrogen promises to be the best observational probe of the Epoch of Reionization (EoR). This has led to the construction of low-frequency radio interferometric arrays, such as the Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array (HERA), aimed at systematically mapping this emission for the first time. Precision calibration, however, is a requirement in 21 cm radio observations. Due to the spatial compactness of HERA, the array is prone to the effects of mutual coupling, which inevitably lead to non-smooth calibration errors that contaminate the data. When unsmooth gains are used in calibration, intrinsically spectrally smooth foreground emission begins to contaminate the data in a way that can prohibit a clean detection of the cosmological EoR signal. In this paper, we show that the effects of mutual coupling on calibration quality can be reduced by applying custom time-domain filters to the data prior to calibration. We find that more robust calibration solutions are derived when filtering in this way, which reduces the observed foreground power leakage. Specifically, we find a reduction of foreground power leakage by 2 orders of magnitude at |$k_\parallel \approx 0.5$| h Mpc |$^{-1}$|. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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34. Continent-wide effects of urbanization on bird and mammal genetic diversity
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Schmidt, C., Domaratzki, M., Kinnunen, R. P., Bowman, J., and Garroway, C. J.
- Published
- 2020
35. Low frequency observations of linearly polarized structures in the interstellar medium near the south Galactic pole
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Lenc, Emil, Gaensler, B. M., Sun, X. H., Sadler, E. M., Willis, A. G., Barry, N., Beardsley, A. P., Bell, M. E., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Callingham, J. R., Cappallo, R. J., Carroll, P., Corey, B. E., de Oliveira-Costa, A., Deshpande, A. A., Dillon, J. S., Dwarkanath, K. S., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., For, B. -Q., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hancock, P., Hazelton, B. J., Hewitt, J. N., Hindson, L., Hurley-Walker, N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Jacobs, D. C., Kapinska, A. D., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kim, H. -S., Kratzenberg, E., Line, J., Loeb, A., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McKinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Morgan, J., Murphy, T., Neben, A. R., Oberoi, D., Offringa, A. R., Ord, S. M., Paul, S., Pindor, B., Pober, J. C., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Sethi, S. K., Srivani, K. S., Staveley-Smith, L., Subrahmanyan, R., Sullivan, I. S., Tegmark, M., Thyagarajan, Nithyanandan, Tingay, S. J., Trott, C., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., Wu, C., Wyithe, J. S. B., and Zheng, Q.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present deep polarimetric observations at 154 MHz with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA), covering 625 deg^2 centered on RA=0 h, Dec=-27 deg. The sensitivity available in our deep observations allows an in-band, frequency-dependent analysis of polarized structure for the first time at long wavelengths. Our analysis suggests that the polarized structures are dominated by intrinsic emission but may also have a foreground Faraday screen component. At these wavelengths, the compactness of the MWA baseline distribution provides excellent snapshot sensitivity to large-scale structure. The observations are sensitive to diffuse polarized emission at ~54' resolution with a sensitivity of 5.9 mJy beam^-1 and compact polarized sources at ~2.4' resolution with a sensitivity of 2.3 mJy beam^-1 for a subset (400 deg^2) of this field. The sensitivity allows the effect of ionospheric Faraday rotation to be spatially and temporally measured directly from the diffuse polarized background. Our observations reveal large-scale structures (~1 deg - 8 deg in extent) in linear polarization clearly detectable in ~2 minute snapshots, which would remain undetectable by interferometers with minimum baseline lengths >110 m at 154 MHz. The brightness temperature of these structures is on average 4 K in polarized intensity, peaking at 11 K. Rotation measure synthesis reveals that the structures have Faraday depths ranging from -2 rad m^-2 to 10 rad m^-2 with a large fraction peaking at ~+1 rad m^-2. We estimate a distance of 51+/-20 pc to the polarized emission based on measurements of the in-field pulsar J2330-2005. We detect four extragalactic linearly polarized point sources within the field in our compact source survey. Based on the known polarized source population at 1.4 GHz and non-detections at 154 MHz, we estimate an upper limit on the depolarization ratio of 0.08 from 1.4 GHz to 154 MHz., Comment: 32 pages, 20 figures, accepted to ApJ
- Published
- 2016
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36. A High Reliability Survey of Discrete Epoch of Reionization Foreground Sources in the MWA EoR0 Field
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Carroll, P. A., Line, J., Morales, M. F., Barry, N., Beardsley, A. P., Hazelton, B. J., Jacobs, D. C., Pober, J. C., Sullivan, I. S., Webster, R. L., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., de Oliveira-Costa, A., Dillon, J. S., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hewitt, J. N., Hurley-Walker, N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kim, HS., Kratzenberg, E., Lenc, E., Loeb, A., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McKinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morgan, E., Neben, A. R., Oberoi, D., Offringa, A. R., Ord, S. M., Paul, S., Pindor, B., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Sethi, S. K., Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tegmark, M., Thyagarajan, Nithyanandan, Tingay, S. J., Trott, C. M., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., Wu, C., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Detection of the Epoch of Reionization HI signal requires a precise understanding of the intervening galaxies and AGN, both for instrumental calibration and foreground removal. We present a catalogue of 7394 extragalactic sources at 182 MHz detected in the RA=0 field of the Murchison Widefield Array Epoch of Reionization observation programme. Motivated by unprecedented requirements for precision and reliability we develop new methods for source finding and selection. We apply machine learning methods to self-consistently classify the relative reliability of 9490 source candidates. A subset of 7466 are selected based on reliability class and signal-to-noise ratio criteria. These are statistically cross-matched to four other radio surveys using both position and flux density information. We find 7369 sources to have confident matches, including 90 partially resolved sources that split into a total of 192 sub-components. An additional 25 unmatched sources are included as new radio detections. The catalogue sources have a median spectral index of -0.85. Spectral flattening is seen toward lower frequencies with a median of -0.71 predicted at 182 MHz. The astrometric error is 7 arcsec. compared to a 2.3 arcmin. beam FWHM. The resulting catalogue covers approximately 1400 sq. deg. and is complete to approximately 80 mJy within half beam power. This provides the most reliable discrete source sky model available to date in the MWA EoR0 field for precision foreground subtraction., Comment: Accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Main Journal on June 30, 2016
- Published
- 2016
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37. The radio spectral energy distribution of infrared-faint radio sources
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Herzog, A., Norris, R. P., Middelberg, E., Seymour, N., Spitler, L. R., Emonts, B. H. C., Franzen, T. M. O., Hunstead, R., Intema, H. T., Marvil, J., Parker, Q. A., Sirothia, S. K., Hurley-Walker, N., Bell, M., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Callingham, J. R., Deshpande, A. A., Dwarakanath, K. S., For, B. -Q., Greenhill, L. J., Hancock, P., Hazelton, B. J., Hindson, L., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kapinska, A. D., Kaplan, D. L., Lenc, E., Lonsdale, C. J., McKinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Morgan, J., Oberoi, D., Offringa, A., Ord, S. M., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Staveley-Smith, L., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., Wu, C., Zheng, Q., Chippendale, A. P., Harvey-Smith, L., Heywood, I., Indermuehle, B., Popping, A., Sault, R. J., and Whiting, M. T.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
Infrared-faint radio sources (IFRS) are a class of radio-loud (RL) active galactic nuclei (AGN) at high redshifts (z > 1.7) that are characterised by their relative infrared faintness, resulting in enormous radio-to-infrared flux density ratios of up to several thousand. We aim to test the hypothesis that IFRS are young AGN, particularly GHz peaked-spectrum (GPS) and compact steep-spectrum (CSS) sources that have a low frequency turnover. We use the rich radio data set available for the Australia Telescope Large Area Survey fields, covering the frequency range between 150 MHz and 34 GHz with up to 19 wavebands from different telescopes, and build radio spectral energy distributions (SEDs) for 34 IFRS. We then study the radio properties of this class of object with respect to turnover, spectral index, and behaviour towards higher frequencies. We also present the highest-frequency radio observations of an IFRS, observed with the Plateau de Bure Interferometer at 105 GHz, and model the multi-wavelength and radio-far-infrared SED of this source. We find IFRS usually follow single power laws down to observed frequencies of around 150 MHz. Mostly, the radio SEDs are steep, but we also find ultra-steep SEDs. In particular, IFRS show statistically significantly steeper radio SEDs than the broader RL AGN population. Our analysis reveals that the fractions of GPS and CSS sources in the population of IFRS are consistent with the fractions in the broader RL AGN population. We find that at least 18% of IFRS contain young AGN, although the fraction might be significantly higher as suggested by the steep SEDs and the compact morphology of IFRS. The detailed multi-wavelength SED modelling of one IFRS shows that it is different from ordinary AGN, although it is consistent with a composite starburst-AGN model with a star formation rate of 170 solar masses per year., Comment: 25 pages, 7 figures, 5 tables, accepted for publication in A&A
- Published
- 2016
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38. Detection System for Neutron $\beta$ Decay Correlations in the UCNB and Nab experiments
- Author
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Broussard, L. J., Zeck, B. A., Adamek, E. R., Baeßler, S., Birge, N., Blatnik, M., Bowman, J. D., Brandt, A. E., Brown, M., Burkhart, J., Callahan, N. B., Clayton, S. M., Crawford, C., Cude-Woods, C., Currie, S., Dees, E. B., Ding, X., Fomin, N., Frlez, E., Fry, J., Gray, F. E., Hasan, S., Hickerson, K. P., Hoagland, J., Holley, A. T., Ito, T. M., Klein, A., Li, H., Liu, C. -Y., Makela, M. F., McGaughey, P. L., Mirabal-Martinez, J., Morris, C. L., Ortiz, J. D., Pattie Jr., R. W., Penttilä, S. I., Plaster, B., Počanić, D., Ramsey, J. C., Salas-Bacci, A., Salvat, D. J., Saunders, A., Seestrom, S. J., Sjue, S. K. L., Sprow, A. P., Tang, Z., Vogelaar, R. B., Vorndick, B., Wang, Z., Wei, W., Wexler, J., Wilburn, W. S., Womack, T. L., and Young, A. R.
- Subjects
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors ,Nuclear Experiment - Abstract
We describe a detection system designed for precise measurements of angular correlations in neutron $\beta$ decay. The system is based on thick, large area, highly segmented silicon detectors developed in collaboration with Micron Semiconductor, Ltd. The prototype system meets specifications for $\beta$ electron detection with energy thresholds below 10 keV, energy resolution of $\sim$3 keV FWHM, and rise time of $\sim$50 ns with 19 of the 127 detector pixels instrumented. Using ultracold neutrons at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center, we have demonstrated the coincident detection of $\beta$ particles and recoil protons from neutron $\beta$ decay. The fully instrumented detection system will be implemented in the UCNB and Nab experiments, to determine the neutron $\beta$ decay parameters $B$, $a$, and $b$., Comment: Copyright 2016. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
- Published
- 2016
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39. Time-domain and spectral properties of pulsars at 154 MHz
- Author
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Bell, M. E., Murphy, Tara, Johnston, S., Kaplan, D. L., Croft, S., Hancock, P., Callingham, J. R., Zic, A., Dobie, D., Swiggum, J. K., Rowlinson, A., Hurley-Walker, N., Offringa, A. R., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Deshpande, A. A., Gaensler, B. M., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Lonsdale, C. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Prabu, T., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present 154 MHz Murchison Widefield Array imaging observations and variability information for a sample of pulsars. Over the declination range $-80^{\circ} < {\delta} < 10^{\circ}$ we detect 17 known pulsars with mean flux density greater than 0.3 Jy. We explore the variability properties of this sample on timescales of minutes to years. For three of these pulsars, PSR J0953+0755, PSR J0437-4715 and PSR J0630-2834 we observe interstellar scintillation and variability on timescales of greater than 2 minutes. One further pulsar, PSR J0034-0721, showed significant variability, the physical origins of which are difficult to determine. The dynamic spectra for PSR J0953+0755 and PSR J0437-4715 show discrete time and frequency structure consistent with diffractive interstellar scintillation and we present the scintillation bandwidth and timescales from these observations. The remaining pulsars within our sample were statistically non-variable. We also explore the spectral properties of this sample and find spectral curvature in pulsars PSR J0835-4510, PSR J1752-2806 and PSR J0437-4715.
- Published
- 2016
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40. A Large Scale, Low Frequency Murchison Widefield Array Survey of Galactic HII regions between 260< l <\340
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Hindson, L., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Hurley-Walker, N., Callingham, J. R., Su, H., Morgan, J., Bell, M., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Deshpande, A. A., Dwarakanath, K. S., For, B. -Q, Gaensler, B. M., Greenhill, L. J., Hancock, P., Hazelton, B. J., Kapinska, A. D., Kaplan, D. L., Lenc, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Mckinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Offringa, A., Ord, S. M., Procopio, P., Prabu, T., UdayaShankar, N., Srivani, K. S., Staveley-Smith, L., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., Wu, C., and Zheng, Q.
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Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We have compiled a catalogue of HII regions detected with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) between 72 and 231MHz. The multiple frequency bands provided by the MWA allow us identify the characteristic spectrum generated by the thermal Bremsstrahlung process in HII regions. We detect 302 HII regions between 260 < l < 340 and report on the positions, sizes, peak, integrated flux density, and spectral indices of these HII regions. By identifying the point at which HII regions transition from the optically thin to thick regime we derive the physical properties including the electron density, ionised gas mass and ionising photon flux, towards 61 HII regions. This catalogue of HII regions represents the most extensive and uniform low frequency survey of HII regions in the Galaxy to date., Comment: 20 pages, 9 figures, 3 tables
- Published
- 2016
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41. The 154 MHz radio sky observed by the Murchison Widefield Array: noise, confusion and first source count analyses
- Author
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Franzen, T. M. O., Jackson, C. A., Offringa, A. R., Ekers, R. D., Wayth, R. B., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Deshpande, A. A., Gaensler, B. M., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Lonsdale, C. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Morgan, J., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Prabu, T., Seymour, N., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Trott, C. M., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We analyse a 154 MHz image made from a 12 h observation with the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) to determine the noise contribution and behaviour of the source counts down to 30 mJy. The MWA image has a bandwidth of 30.72 MHz, a field-of-view within the half-power contour of the primary beam of 570 deg^2, a resolution of 2.3 arcmin and contains 13,458 sources above 5 sigma. The rms noise in the centre of the image is 4-5 mJy/beam. The MWA counts are in excellent agreement with counts from other instruments and are the most precise ever derived in the flux density range 30-200 mJy due to the sky area covered. Using the deepest available source count data, we find that the MWA image is affected by sidelobe confusion noise at the ~3.5 mJy/beam level, due to incompletely-peeled and out-of-image sources, and classical confusion becomes apparent at ~1.7 mJy/beam. This work highlights that (i) further improvements in ionospheric calibration and deconvolution imaging techniques would be required to probe to the classical confusion limit and (ii) the shape of low-frequency source counts, including any flattening towards lower flux densities, must be determined from deeper ~150 MHz surveys as it cannot be directly inferred from higher frequency data., Comment: 13 pages, 13 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS
- Published
- 2016
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42. High-energy sources at low radio frequency: the Murchison Widefield Array view of Fermi blazars
- Author
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Giroletti, M., Massaro, F., D'Abrusco, R., Lico, R., Burlon, D., Hurley-Walker, N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Morgan, J., Pavlidou, V., Bell, M., Bernardi, G., Bhat, R., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., Ewall-Rice, A., Emrich, D., Gaensler, B. M., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Hindson, L., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kratzenberg, E., Feng, L., Jacobs, D., Kurdryavtseva, N., Lenc, E., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McKinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Offringa, A. R., Ord, S. M., Pindor, B., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
Low-frequency radio arrays are opening a new window for the study of the sky, both to study new phenomena and to better characterize known source classes. Being flat-spectrum sources, blazars are so far poorly studied at low radio frequencies. We characterize the spectral properties of the blazar population at low radio frequency compare the radio and high-energy properties of the gamma-ray blazar population, and search for radio counterparts of unidentified gamma-ray sources. We cross-correlated the 6,100 deg^2 Murchison Widefield Array Commissioning Survey catalogue with the Roma blazar catalogue, the third catalogue of active galactic nuclei detected by Fermi-LAT, and the unidentified members of the entire third catalogue of gamma-ray sources detected by \fermilat. When available, we also added high-frequency radio data from the Australia Telescope 20 GHz catalogue. We find low-frequency counterparts for 186 out of 517 (36%) blazars, 79 out of 174 (45%) gamma-ray blazars, and 8 out of 73 (11%) gamma-ray blazar candidates. The mean low-frequency (120--180 MHz) blazar spectral index is $\langle \alpha_\mathrm{low} \rangle=0.57\pm0.02$: blazar spectra are flatter than the rest of the population of low-frequency sources, but are steeper than at $\sim$GHz frequencies. Low-frequency radio flux density and gamma-ray energy flux display a mildly significant and broadly scattered correlation. Ten unidentified gamma-ray sources have a (probably fortuitous) positional match with low radio frequency sources. Low-frequency radio astronomy provides important information about sources with a flat radio spectrum and high energy. However, the relatively low sensitivity of the present surveys still misses a significant fraction of these objects. Upcoming deeper surveys, such as the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-Sky MWA (GLEAM) survey, will provide further insight into this population., Comment: accepted for publication in A&A
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- 2016
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43. Limits on Fast Radio Bursts and other transient sources at 182 MHz using the Murchison Widefield Array
- Author
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Rowlinson, A., Bell, M. E., Murphy, T., Trott, C. M., Hurley-Walker, N., Johnston, S., Tingay, S. J., Kaplan, D. L., Carbone, D., Hancock, P. J., Feng, L., Offringa, A. R., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Deshpande, A. A., Gaensler, B. M., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Lonsdale, C. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Prabu, T., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a survey for transient and variable sources, on timescales from 28 seconds to $\sim$1 year, using the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) at 182 MHz. Down to a detection threshold of 0.285 Jy, no transient candidates were identified, making this the most constraining low-frequency survey to date and placing a limit on the surface density of transients of $<4.1 \times 10^{-7}$ deg$^{-2}$ for the shortest timescale considered. At these frequencies, emission from Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) is expected to be detectable in the shortest timescale images without any corrections for interstellar or intergalactic dispersion. At an FRB limiting flux density of 7980 Jy, we find a rate of $<$82 FRBs per sky per day for dispersion measures $<$700 pc cm$^{-3}$. Assuming a cosmological population of standard candles, our rate limits are consistent with the FRB rates obtained by Thornton et al. (2013) if they have a flat spectral slope. Finally, we conduct an initial variability survey of sources in the field with flux densities $\gtrsim$0.5 Jy and identify no sources with significant variability in their lightcurves. However, we note that substantial further work is required to fully characterise both the short term and low level variability within this field., Comment: MNRAS Accepted, 17 pages, 10 figures
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- 2016
- Full Text
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44. Beamforming Errors in Murchison Widefield Array Phased Array Antennas and their effects on Epoch of Reionization Science
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Neben, A. R., Hewitt, J. N., Bradley, R. F., Dillon, J. S., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Corey, B. E., Deshpande, A. A., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Lonsdale, C. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Oberoi, D., Ord, S. M., Prabu, T., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tingay, S. J., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Accurate antenna beam models are critical for radio observations aiming to isolate the redshifted 21cm spectral line emission from the Dark Ages and the Epoch of Reionization and unlock the scientific potential of 21cm cosmology. Past work has focused on characterizing mean antenna beam models using either satellite signals or astronomical sources as calibrators, but antenna-to-antenna variation due to imperfect instrumentation has remained unexplored. We characterize this variation for the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) through laboratory measurements and simulations, finding typical deviations of order +/- 10-20% near the edges of the main lobe and in the sidelobes. We consider the ramifications of these results for image- and power spectrum-based science. In particular, we simulate visibilities measured by a 100m baseline and find that using an otherwise perfect foreground model, unmodeled beamforming errors severely limit foreground subtraction accuracy within the region of Fourier space contaminated by foreground emission (the "wedge"). This region likely contains much of the cosmological signal, and accessing it will require measurement of per-antenna beam patterns. However, unmodeled beamforming errors do not contaminate the Fourier space region expected to be free of foreground contamination (the "EOR window"), showing that foreground avoidance remains a viable strategy., Comment: Accepted to ApJ
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- 2016
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45. Parametrising Epoch of Reionization foregrounds: A deep survey of low-frequency point-source spectra with the MWA
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Offringa, A. R., Trott, C. M., Hurley-Walker, N., Johnston-Hollitt, M., McKinley, B., Barry, N., Beardsley, A. P., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Carroll, P., Dillon, J. S., Ewall-Wice, A., Feng, L., Gaensler, B. M., Greenhill, L. J., Hazelton, B. J., Hewitt, J. N., Jacobs, D. C., Kim, H. -S., Kittiwisit, P., Lenc, E., Line, J., Loeb, A., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Neben, A. R., Paul, S., Pindor, B., Pober, J. C., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Sethi, S. K., Shankar, N. U., Subrahmanyan, R., Sullivan, I. S., Tegmark, M., Thyagarajan, N., Tingay, S. J., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Experiments that pursue detection of signals from the Epoch of Reionization (EoR) are relying on spectral smoothness of source spectra at low frequencies. This article empirically explores the effect of foreground spectra on EoR experiments by measuring high-resolution full-polarization spectra for the 586 brightest unresolved sources in one of the MWA EoR fields using 45 h of observation. A novel peeling scheme is used to subtract 2500 sources from the visibilities with ionospheric and beam corrections, resulting in the deepest, confusion-limited MWA image so far. The resulting spectra are found to be affected by instrumental effects, which limit the constraints that can be set on source-intrinsic spectral structure. The sensitivity and power-spectrum of the spectra are analysed, and it is found that the spectra of residuals are dominated by PSF sidelobes from nearby undeconvolved sources. We release a catalogue describing the spectral parameters for each measured source., Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 15 pages, 16 figures. Catalogue of sources externally available as CSV file
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- 2016
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46. The Importance of Wide-field Foreground Removal for 21 cm Cosmology: A Demonstration With Early MWA Epoch of Reionization Observations
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Pober, J. C., Hazelton, B. J., Beardsley, A. P., Barry, N. A., Martinot, Z. E., Sullivan, I. S., Morales, M. F., Bell, M. E., Bernardi, G., Bhat, N. D. R., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Carroll, P., Corey, B. E., de Oliveira-Costa, A., Deshpande, A. A., Dillon, Joshua. S., Emrich, D., Ewall-Wice, A. M., Feng, L., Goeke, R., Greenhill, L. J., Hewitt, J. N., Hindson, L., Hurley-Walker, N., Jacobs, D. C., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Kasper, J. C., Kim, Han-Seek, Kittiwisit, P., Kratzenberg, E., Kudryavtseva, N., Lenc, E., Line, J., Loeb, A., Lonsdale, C. J., Lynch, M. J., McKinley, B., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morgan, E., Neben, A. R., Oberoi, D., Offringa, A. R., Ord, S. M., Paul, Sourabh, Pindor, B., Prabu, T., Procopio, P., Riding, J., Rogers, A. E. E., Roshi, A., Sethi, Shiv K., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Tegmark, M., Thyagarajan, Nithyanandan, Tingay, S. J., Trott, C. M., Waterson, M., Wayth, R. B., Webster, R. L., Whitney, A. R., Williams, A., Williams, C. L., and Wyithe, J. S. B.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
In this paper we present observations, simulations, and analysis demonstrating the direct connection between the location of foreground emission on the sky and its location in cosmological power spectra from interferometric redshifted 21 cm experiments. We begin with a heuristic formalism for understanding the mapping of sky coordinates into the cylindrically averaged power spectra measurements used by 21 cm experiments, with a focus on the effects of the instrument beam response and the associated sidelobes. We then demonstrate this mapping by analyzing power spectra with both simulated and observed data from the Murchison Widefield Array. We find that removing a foreground model which includes sources in both the main field-of-view and the first sidelobes reduces the contamination in high k_parallel modes by several percent relative to a model which only includes sources in the main field-of-view, with the completeness of the foreground model setting the principal limitation on the amount of power removed. While small, a percent-level amount of foreground power is in itself more than enough to prevent recovery of any EoR signal from these modes. This result demonstrates that foreground subtraction for redshifted 21 cm experiments is truly a wide-field problem, and algorithms and simulations must extend beyond the main instrument field-of-view to potentially recover the full 21 cm power spectrum., Comment: 13 pages, 9 figures, matches version accepted to ApJ
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- 2016
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47. A Space-based Observational Strategy for Characterizing the First Stars and Galaxies Using the Redshifted 21 cm Global Spectrum
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Burns, JO, Bradley, R, Tauscher, K, Furlanetto, S, Mirocha, J, Monsalve, R, Rapetti, D, Purcell, W, Newell, D, Draper, D, Macdowall, R, Bowman, J, Nhan, B, Wollack, EJ, Fialkov, A, Jones, D, Kasper, JC, Loeb, A, Datta, A, Pritchard, J, Switzer, E, and Bicay, M
- Subjects
cosmology: observations ,dark ages ,reionization ,first stars ,dark ages ,reionization ,first stars ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry ,Atomic ,Molecular ,Nuclear ,Particle and Plasma Physics ,Physical Chemistry (incl. Structural) - Abstract
The redshifted 21 cm monopole is expected to be a powerful probe of the epoch of the first stars and galaxies (10 < z < 35). The global 21 cm signal is sensitive to the thermal and ionization state of hydrogen gas and thus provides a tracer of sources of energetic photons-primarily hot stars and accreting black holes-which ionize and heat the high redshift intergalactic medium (IGM). This paper presents a strategy for observations of the global spectrum with a realizable instrument placed in a low-altitude lunar orbit, performing night-time 40-120 MHz spectral observations, while on the farside to avoid terrestrial radio frequency interference, ionospheric corruption, and solar radio emissions. The frequency structure, uniformity over large scales, and unpolarized state of the redshifted 21 cm spectrum are distinct from the spectrally featureless, spatially varying, and polarized emission from the bright foregrounds. This allows a clean separation between the primordial signal and foregrounds. For signal extraction, we model the foreground, instrument, and 21 cm spectrum with eigenmodes calculated via Singular Value Decomposition analyses. Using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo algorithm to explore the parameter space defined by the coefficients associated with these modes, we illustrate how the spectrum can be measured and how astrophysical parameters (e.g., IGM properties, first star characteristics) can be constrained in the presence of foregrounds using the Dark Ages Radio Explorer (DARE).
- Published
- 2017
48. Evidence for low‐pressure crustal anatexis during the northeast atlantic break‐up
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Morris, A. M., Lambart, S., Stearns, M. A., Bowman, J. R., Jones, Morgan, Mohn, G., Andrews, G., Millett, J., Tegner, C., Chatterjee, S., Frieling, J., Guo, P., Jolley, D. W., Cunningham, E. H., Berndt, C., Planke, S., Alvarez Zarikian, C. A., Betlem, P., Brinkhuis, H., Christopoulou, M., Ferré, E., Filina, I. Y., Harper, D. T., Longman, J., Scherer, R. P., Varela, N., Xu, W., Yager, S. L., Agarwal, A., Clementi, V. J., Morris, A. M., Lambart, S., Stearns, M. A., Bowman, J. R., Jones, Morgan, Mohn, G., Andrews, G., Millett, J., Tegner, C., Chatterjee, S., Frieling, J., Guo, P., Jolley, D. W., Cunningham, E. H., Berndt, C., Planke, S., Alvarez Zarikian, C. A., Betlem, P., Brinkhuis, H., Christopoulou, M., Ferré, E., Filina, I. Y., Harper, D. T., Longman, J., Scherer, R. P., Varela, N., Xu, W., Yager, S. L., Agarwal, A., and Clementi, V. J.
- Abstract
While basaltic volcanism is dominant during rifting and continental breakup, felsic magmatism may be a significant component of some rift margins. During International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 396 on the continental margin of Norway, a graphite-garnet-cordierite bearing dacitic unit (the Mimir dacite) was recovered in two holes within early Eocene sediments on Mimir High (Site U1570), a marginal high on the Vøring Transform Margin. Here, we present a comprehensive textural, petrological, and geochemical study of the Mimir dacite in order to assess its origin and discuss the geodynamic implications. The major mineral phases (garnet, cordierite, quartz, plagioclase, alkali feldspar) are hosted in a fresh rhyolitic, vesicular, glassy matrix that is locally mingled with sediments. The major element chemistry of garnet and cordierite, the presence of zircon inclusions with inherited cores, and thermobarometric calculations all support an upper crustal metapelitic origin. While most magma-rich margin models favor crustal anatexis in the lower crust, thermobarometric calculations performed here show that the Mimir dacite was produced at upper-crustal depths (<5 kbar, 18 km depth) and high temperature (750–800°C) with up to 3 wt% water content. In situ U-Pb analyses on zircon inclusions give a magmatic crystallization age of 54.6 ± 1.1 Ma, consistent with emplacement that post-dates the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum. Our results suggest that the opening of the Northeast Atlantic was associated with a phase of low-pressure, high-temperature crustal anatexis preceding the main phase of magmatism.
- Published
- 2024
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49. The associations between social determinants of health, mental health, substance-use and recidivism: a ten-year retrospective cohort analysis of women who completed the connections programme in Australia.
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Edwards, LM, Chang, S, Zeki, R, Jamieson, SK, Bowman, J, Cooper, C, Sullivan, E, Edwards, LM, Chang, S, Zeki, R, Jamieson, SK, Bowman, J, Cooper, C, and Sullivan, E
- Abstract
BACKGROUND: Women with substance-use issues are overrepresented in prison. Research on women's recidivism often focuses on offending behaviour rather than the health and social circumstances women are experiencing when reimprisonment occurs. This study examines the relationship between social determinants of health (SDOH), mental health, substance-use and recidivism among women exiting prison with histories of substance-use. METHODS: A retrospective cohort study of women exiting prison who completed the transitional support programme "Connections" between 2008 and 2018. Recidivism was measured up to two years post-release. Women's support needs were measured at baseline (4 weeks pre-release) and follow-up (four weeks post-release). Ongoing needs in relation to well-established SDOH were calculated if: (1) at baseline women were identified as having a re-entry need with housing, employment, finances, education, domestic violence, child-custody and social support and (2) at follow-up women reported still needing help in that area. Women's self-reported substance-use and mental health since release were captured at follow-up. Descriptive statistics were calculated for all measures. Associations between SDOH, mental health, substance-use and recidivism were estimated by multiple logistic regression, adjusting for potential confounders. We also evaluated the mediating effects of mental health on the relationship between SDOH and substance-use. RESULTS: Substance-use was associated with increased odds of recidivism (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) 1.8, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.1-2.9; p = 0.02). Poor mental health (AOR 2.9, 95% CI 1.9-4.6; p = < 0.01), ongoing social support (AOR 3.0, 95% CI 1.9-5.0; p = < 0.01), child-custody (AOR 1.9, 95% CI 1.0-3.3 p = 0.04), financial (AOR 2.0, 95% CI 1.3-3.2; p = < 0.01) and housing (AOR 1.8, 95% CI 1.1-2.9; p = 0.02) needs were individually associated with increased odds of substance-use. Mediation analysis found mental health ful
- Published
- 2024
50. A search for Fast Radio Bursts at low frequencies with Murchison Widefield Array high time resolution imaging
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Tingay, S. J., Trott, C. M., Wayth, R. B., Bernardi, G., Bowman, J. D., Briggs, F., Cappallo, R. J., Deshpande, A. A., Feng, L., Gaensler, B. M., Greenhill, L. J., Hancock, P. J., Hazelton, B. J., Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kaplan, D. L., Lonsdale, C. J., McWhirter, S. R., Mitchell, D. A., Morales, M. F., Morgan, E., Murphy, T., Oberoi, D., Prabu, T., Shankar, N. Udaya, Srivani, K. S., Subrahmanyan, R., Webster, R. L., Williams, A., and Williams, C. L.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the results of a pilot study search for Fast Radio Bursts (FRBs) using the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) at low frequencies (139 - 170 MHz). We utilised MWA data obtained in a routine imaging mode from observations where the primary target was a field being studied for Epoch of Reionisation detection. We formed images with 2 second time resolution and 1.28~MHz frequency resolution for 10.5 hours of observations, over 400 square degrees of the sky. We de-dispersed the dynamic spectrum in each of 372,100 resolution elements of 2$\times$2 arcmin$^{2}$, between dispersion measures of 170 and 675~pc~cm$^{-3}$. Based on the event rate calculations in Trott, Tingay & Wayth (2013), which assumes a standard candle luminosity of $8\times10^{37}$ Js$^{-1}$, we predict that with this choice of observational parameters, the MWA should detect ($\sim10$,$\sim2$,$\sim0$) FRBs with spectral indices corresponding to ($-$2, $-$1, 0), based on a 7$\sigma$ detection threshold. We find no FRB candidates above this threshold from our search, placing an event rate limit of $<700$ above 700 Jy.ms per day per sky and providing evidence against spectral indices $\alpha<-1.2$ ($S\propto\nu^{\alpha}$). We compare our event rate and spectral index limits with others from the literature. We briefly discuss these limits in light of recent suggestions that supergiant pulses from young neutron stars could explain FRBs. We find that such supergiant pulses would have to have much flatter spectra between 150 and 1400 MHz than have been observed from Crab giant pulses to be consistent with the FRB spectral index limit we derive., Comment: 14 pages, 5 figures
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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