670 results on '"Wiebe, Donald"'
Search Results
2. When God Talks Back: Understanding the American Evangelical Relationship with God by T.M. Luhrmann (review)
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald
- Published
- 2013
3. A Theology of Higher Education by Mike Higton (review)
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald
- Published
- 2013
4. The Spiritual Doorway in the Brain: A Neurologist's Search for the God Experience (review)
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Prometheus Rebound: The Irony of Atheism by Joseph C. McLelland (review)
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald
- Published
- 2014
6. Religion in Human Evolution: From the Paleolithic to the Axial Age by Robert Bellah (review)
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald
- Published
- 2014
7. An Eternal Return All Over Again: The Religious Conversation Endures
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald
- Published
- 2006
8. Braintrust: What Neuroscience Tells Us about Morality (review)
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Religious Studies in Atlantic Canada: A State-of-the-Art Review . Volume 6 of Study of Religion in Canada by Paul W.R. Bowlby, Tom Faulkner (review)
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald
- Published
- 2014
10. Detection of Cosmological 21 cm Emission with the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment
- Author
-
CHIME Collaboration, Amiri, Mandana, Bandura, Kevin, Chen, Tianyue, Deng, Meiling, Dobbs, Matt, Fandino, Mateus, Foreman, Simon, Halpern, Mark, Hill, Alex S., Hinshaw, Gary, Höfer, Carolin, Kania, Joseph, Landecker, T. L., MacEachern, Joshua, Masui, Kiyoshi, Mena-Parra, Juan, Milutinovic, Nikola, Mirhosseini, Arash, Newburgh, Laura, Ordog, Anna, Pen, Ue-Li, Pinsonneault-Marotte, Tristan, Polzin, Ava, Reda, Alex, Renard, Andre, Shaw, J. Richard, Siegel, Seth R., Singh, Saurabh, Vanderlinde, Keith, Wang, Haochen, Wiebe, Donald V., and Wulf, Dallas
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present a detection of 21-cm emission from large-scale structure (LSS) between redshift 0.78 and 1.43 made with the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME). Radio observations acquired over 102 nights are used to construct maps which are foreground filtered and stacked on the angular and spectral locations of luminous red galaxies (LRG), emission line galaxies (ELG), and quasars (QSO) from the eBOSS clustering catalogs. We find decisive evidence for a detection when stacking on all three tracers of LSS, with the logarithm of the Bayes Factor equal to 18.9 (LRG), 10.8 (ELG), and 56.3 (QSO). An alternative frequentist interpretation, based on the likelihood-ratio test, yields a detection significance of $7.1\sigma$ (LRG), $5.7\sigma$ (ELG), and $11.1\sigma$ (QSO). These are the first 21-cm intensity mapping measurements made with an interferometer. We constrain the effective clustering amplitude of neutral hydrogen (HI), defined as $\mathcal{A}_{\rm HI}\equiv 10^{3}\,\Omega_\mathrm{HI}\left(b_\mathrm{HI}+\langle\,f\mu^{2}\rangle\right)$, where $\Omega_\mathrm{HI}$ is the cosmic abundance of HI, $b_\mathrm{HI}$ is the linear bias of HI, and $\langle\,f\mu^{2}\rangle=0.552$ encodes the effect of redshift-space distortions at linear order. We find $\mathcal{A}_\mathrm{HI}=1.51^{+3.60}_{-0.97}$ for LRGs $(z=0.84)$, $\mathcal{A}_\mathrm{HI}=6.76^{+9.04}_{-3.79}$ for ELGs $(z=0.96)$, and $\mathcal{A}_\mathrm{HI}=1.68^{+1.10}_{-0.67}$ for QSOs $(z=1.20)$, with constraints limited by modeling uncertainties at nonlinear scales. We are also sensitive to bias in the spectroscopic redshifts of each tracer, and find a non-zero bias $\Delta\,v= -66 \pm 20 \mathrm{km/s}$ for the QSOs. We split the QSO catalog into three redshift bins and have a decisive detection in each, with the upper bin at $z=1.30$ producing the highest redshift 21-cm intensity mapping measurement thus far., Comment: 66 pages, 30 figures
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. An Overview of CHIME, the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment
- Author
-
The CHIME Collaboration, Amiri, Mandana, Bandura, Kevin, Boskovic, Anja, Chen, Tianyue, Cliche, Jean-François, Deng, Meiling, Denman, Nolan, Dobbs, Matt, Fandino, Mateus, Foreman, Simon, Halpern, Mark, Hanna, David, Hill, Alex S., Hinshaw, Gary, Höfer, Carolin, Kania, Joseph, Klages, Peter, Landecker, T. L., MacEachern, Joshua, Masui, Kiyoshi, Mena-Parra, Juan, Milutinovic, Nikola, Mirhosseini, Arash, Newburgh, Laura, Nitsche, Rick, Ordog, Anna, Pen, Ue-Li, Pinsonneault-Marotte, Tristan, Polzin, Ava, Reda, Alex, Renard, Andre, Shaw, J. Richard, Siegel, Seth R., Singh, Saurabh, Smegal, Rick, Tretyakov, Ian, Van Gassen, Kwinten, Vanderlinde, Keith, Wang, Haochen, Wiebe, Donald V., Willis, James S., and Wulf, Dallas
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) is a drift scan radio telescope operating across the 400-800 MHz band. CHIME is located at the Dominion Radio Astrophysical Observatory near Penticton, BC Canada. The instrument is designed to map neutral hydrogen over the redshift range 0.8 to 2.5 to constrain the expansion history of the Universe. This goal drives the design features of the instrument. CHIME consists of four parallel cylindrical reflectors, oriented north-south, each 100 m $\times$ 20 m and outfitted with a 256 element dual-polarization linear feed array. CHIME observes a two degree wide stripe covering the entire meridian at any given moment, observing 3/4 of the sky every day due to Earth rotation. An FX correlator utilizes FPGAs and GPUs to digitize and correlate the signals, with different correlation products generated for cosmological, fast radio burst, pulsar, VLBI, and 21 cm absorber backends. For the cosmology backend, the $N_\mathrm{feed}^2$ correlation matrix is formed for 1024 frequency channels across the band every 31 ms. A data receiver system applies calibration and flagging and, for our primary cosmological data product, stacks redundant baselines and integrates for 10 s. We present an overview of the instrument, its performance metrics based on the first three years of science data, and we describe the current progress in characterizing CHIME's primary beam response. We also present maps of the sky derived from CHIME data; we are using versions of these maps for a cosmological stacking analysis as well as for investigation of Galactic foregrounds., Comment: 40 pages, 31 figures, 2 tables. Accepted by ApJS
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. More Than Matter? Is There More to Life Than Molecules? (review)
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Thinking about Religion: An Historical Introduction to Theories of Religion (review)
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Being Different: An Indian Challenge to Western Universalism (review)
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Limits on the ultra-bright Fast Radio Burst population from the CHIME Pathfinder
- Author
-
CHIME Scientific Collaboration, Amiri, Mandana, Bandura, Kevin, Berger, Philippe, Bond, J. Richard, Cliche, Jean-François, Connor, Liam, Deng, Meiling, Denman, Nolan, Dobbs, Matt, Domagalski, Rachel Simone, Fandino, Mateus, Gilbert, Adam J, Good, Deborah C., Halpern, Mark, Hanna, David, Hincks, Adam D., Hinshaw, Gary, Höfer, Carolin, Hsyu, Gilbert, Klages, Peter, Landecker, T. L., Masui, Kiyoshi, Mena-Parra, Juan, Newburgh, Laura, Oppermann, Niels, Pen, Ue-Li, Peterson, Jeffrey B., Pinsonneault-Marotte, Tristan, Renard, Andre, Shaw, J. Richard, Siegel, Seth R., Sigurdson, Kris, Smith, Kendrick M., Storer, Emilie, Tretyakov, Ian, Vanderlinde, Keith, and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena - Abstract
We present results from a new incoherent-beam Fast Radio Burst (FRB) search on the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) Pathfinder. Its large instantaneous field of view (FoV) and relative thermal insensitivity allow us to probe the ultra-bright tail of the FRB distribution, and to test a recent claim that this distribution's slope, $\alpha\equiv-\frac{\partial \log N}{\partial \log S}$, is quite small. A 256-input incoherent beamformer was deployed on the CHIME Pathfinder for this purpose. If the FRB distribution were described by a single power-law with $\alpha=0.7$, we would expect an FRB detection every few days, making this the fastest survey on sky at present. We collected 1268 hours of data, amounting to one of the largest exposures of any FRB survey, with over 2.4\,$\times$\,10$^5$\,deg$^2$\,hrs. Having seen no bursts, we have constrained the rate of extremely bright events to $<\!13$\,sky$^{-1}$\,day$^{-1}$ above $\sim$\,220$\sqrt{(\tau/\rm ms)}$ Jy\,ms for $\tau$ between 1.3 and 100\,ms, at 400--800\,MHz. The non-detection also allows us to rule out $\alpha\lesssim0.9$ with 95$\%$ confidence, after marginalizing over uncertainties in the GBT rate at 700--900\,MHz, though we show that for a cosmological population and a large dynamic range in flux density, $\alpha$ is brightness-dependent. Since FRBs now extend to large enough distances that non-Euclidean effects are significant, there is still expected to be a dearth of faint events and relative excess of bright events. Nevertheless we have constrained the allowed number of ultra-intense FRBs. While this does not have significant implications for deeper, large-FoV surveys like full CHIME and APERTIF, it does have important consequences for other wide-field, small dish experiments.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. The Road Not Taken in the Academic Study of Religion
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald, primary
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Method as Identity: Manufacturing Distance in the Academic Study of Religion Driscoll Christopher M. Miller Monica
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald
- Published
- 2020
18. Holographic Beam Mapping of the CHIME Pathfinder Array
- Author
-
Berger, Philippe, Newburgh, Laura B., Amiri, Mandana, Bandura, Kevin, Cliche, Jean-Francois, Connor, Liam, Deng, Meiling, Denman, Nolan, Dobbs, Matt, Fandino, Mateus, Gilbert, Adam J., Good, Deborah, Halpern, Mark, Hanna, David, Hincks, Adam D., Hinshaw, Gary, Hofer, Carolin, Johnson, Andre M., Landecker, Tom L., Masui, Kiyoshi W., Parra, Juan Mena, Oppermann, Niels, Pen, Ue-Li, Peterson, Jeffrey B., Recnik, Andre, Robishaw, Timothy, Shaw, J. Richard, Siegel, Seth, Sigurdson, Kris, Smith, Kendrick, Storer, Emilie, Tretyakov, Ian, Van Gassen, Kwinten, Vanderlinde, Keith, and Wiebe, Donald
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment (CHIME) Pathfinder radio telescope is currently surveying the northern hemisphere between 400 and 800 MHz. By mapping the large scale structure of neutral hydrogen through its redshifted 21 cm line emission between $z \sim 0.8-2.5$ CHIME will contribute to our understanding of Dark Energy. Bright astrophysical foregrounds must be separated from the neutral hydrogen signal, a task which requires precise characterization of the polarized telescope beams. Using the DRAO John A. Galt 26 m telescope, we have developed a holography instrument and technique for mapping the CHIME Pathfinder beams. We report the status of the instrument and initial results of this effort., Comment: 16 pages, 9 figures. Submitted to Proc. SPIE, Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation (2016)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. A cryogenic rotation stage with a large clear aperture for the half-wave plates in the Spider instrument
- Author
-
Bryan, Sean, Ade, Peter, Amiri, Mandana, Benton, Steven, Bihary, Richard, Bock, James, Bond, J. Richard, Chiang, H. Cynthia, Contaldi, Carlo, Crill, Brendan, Dore, Olivier, Elder, Benjamin, Filippini, Jeffrey, Fraisse, Aurelien, Gambrel, Anne, Gandilo, Natalie, Gudmundsson, Jon, Hasselfield, Matthew, Halpern, Mark, Hilton, Gene, Holmes, Warren, Hristov, Viktor, Irwin, Kent, Jones, William, Kermish, Zigmund, Lawrie, Craig, MacTavish, Carrie, Mason, Peter, Megerian, Krikor, Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Montroy, Thomas, Morford, Tracy, Nagy, Johanna, Netterfield, C. Barth, Padilla, Ivan, Rahlin, Alexandra S., Reintsema, Carl, Riley, Daniel C., Ruhl, John, Runyan, Marcus, Saliwanchik, Benjamin, Shariff, Jamil, Soler, Juan, Trangsrud, Amy, Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Rebecca, Turner, Anthony, Wen, Shyang, Wiebe, Donald, and Young, Edward
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe the cryogenic half-wave plate rotation mechanisms built for and used in Spider, a polarization-sensitive balloon-borne telescope array that observed the Cosmic Microwave Background at 95 GHz and 150 GHz during a stratospheric balloon flight from Antarctica in January 2015. The mechanisms operate at liquid helium temperature in flight. A three-point contact design keeps the mechanical bearings relatively small but allows for a large (305 mm) diameter clear aperture. A worm gear driven by a cryogenic stepper motor allows for precise positioning and prevents undesired rotation when the motors are depowered. A custom-built optical encoder system monitors the bearing angle to an absolute accuracy of +/- 0.1 degrees. The system performed well in Spider during its successful 16 day flight., Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, Published in Review of Scientific Instruments. v2 includes reviewer changes and longer literature review
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The ivory tower and the public realm
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald, primary
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Pointing control for the SPIDER balloon-borne telescope
- Author
-
Shariff, Jamil A., Ade, Peter A. R., Amiri, Mandana, Benton, Steven J., Bock, Jamie J., Bond, J. Richard, Bryan, Sean A., Chiang, H. Cynthia, Contaldi, Carlo R., Crill, Brendan P., Doré, Olivier P., Farhang, Marzieh, Filippini, Jeffrey P., Fissel, Laura M., Fraisse, Aurelien A., Gambrel, Anne E., Gandilo, Natalie N., Golwala, Sunil R., Gudmundsson, Jon E., Halpern, Mark, Hasselfield, Matthew, Hilton, Gene C., Holmes, Warren A., Hristov, Viktor V., Irwin, Kent D., Jones, William C., Kermish, Zigmund D., Kuo, Chao-Lin, MacTavish, Carolyn J., Mason, Peter V., Megerian, Krikor G., Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Morford, Tracy A., Nagy, Johanna M., Netterfield, C. Barth, O'Brient, Roger, Rahlin, Alexandra S., Reintsema, Carl D., Ruhl, John E., Runyan, Marcus C., Soler, Juan D., Trangsrud, Amy, Tucker, Carole E., Tucker, Rebecca S., Turner, Anthony D., Weber, Alexis C., Wiebe, Donald V., and Young, Edward Y.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the technology and control methods developed for the pointing system of the SPIDER experiment. SPIDER is a balloon-borne polarimeter designed to detect the imprint of primordial gravitational waves in the polarization of the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation. We describe the two main components of the telescope's azimuth drive: the reaction wheel and the motorized pivot. A 13 kHz PI control loop runs on a digital signal processor, with feedback from fibre optic rate gyroscopes. This system can control azimuthal speed with < 0.02 deg/s RMS error. To control elevation, SPIDER uses stepper-motor-driven linear actuators to rotate the cryostat, which houses the optical instruments, relative to the outer frame. With the velocity in each axis controlled in this way, higher-level control loops on the onboard flight computers can implement the pointing and scanning observation modes required for the experiment. We have accomplished the non-trivial task of scanning a 5000 lb payload sinusoidally in azimuth at a peak acceleration of 0.8 deg/s$^2$, and a peak speed of 6 deg/s. We can do so while reliably achieving sub-arcminute pointing control accuracy., Comment: 20 pages, 12 figures, Presented at SPIE Ground-based and Airborne Telescopes V, June 23, 2014. To be published in Proceedings of SPIE Volume 9145
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Evidence for Environmental Changes in the Submillimeter Dust Opacity
- Author
-
Martin, Peter G., Roy, Arabindo, Bontemps, Sylvain, Miville-Deschênes, Marc-Antoine, Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Dicker, Simon R., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Mauskopf, Philip, Netterfield, Calvin B., Olmi, Luca, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
The submillimeter opacity of dust in the diffuse Galactic interstellar medium (ISM) has been quantified using a pixel-by-pixel correlation of images of continuum emission with a proxy for column density. We used three BLAST bands at 250, 350, and 500 \mu m and one IRAS at 100 \mu m. The proxy is the near-infrared color excess, E(J-Ks), obtained from 2MASS. Based on observations of stars, we show how well this color excess is correlated with the total hydrogen column density for regions of moderate extinction. The ratio of emission to column density, the emissivity, is then known from the correlations, as a function of frequency. The spectral distribution of this emissivity can be fit by a modified blackbody, whence the characteristic dust temperature T and the desired opacity \sigma_e(1200) at 1200 GHz can be obtained. We have analyzed 14 regions near the Galactic plane toward the Vela molecular cloud, mostly selected to avoid regions of high column density (N_H > 10^{22} cm^-2) and small enough to ensure a uniform T. We find \sigma_e(1200) is typically 2 to 4 x 10^{-25} cm^2/H and thus about 2 to 4 times larger than the average value in the local high Galactic latitude diffuse atomic ISM. This is strong evidence for grain evolution. There is a range in total power per H nucleon absorbed (re-radiated) by the dust, reflecting changes in the interstellar radiation field and/or the dust absorption opacity. These changes affect the equilibrium T, which is typically 15 K, colder than at high latitudes. Our analysis extends, to higher opacity and lower T, the trend of increasing opacity with decreasing T that was found at high latitudes. The recognition of changes in the emission opacity raises a cautionary flag because all column densities deduced from dust emission maps, and the masses of compact structures within them, depend inversely on the value adopted., Comment: Original version (22 Dec 2011): 14 pages, 8 figures. Revised version (24 February 2012) accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal (14 March 2012): elaborated details of analysis, extended discussion including new Appendix; abstract, results, conclusions unchanged. 16 pages, 9 figures
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Deconvolution of Images from BLAST 2005: Insight into the K3-50 and IC 5146 Star-Forming Regions
- Author
-
Roy, Arabindo, Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Brunt, Christopher M., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Dicker, Simon R., France, Kevin, Gibb, Andrew G., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Martin, Peter G., Mauskopf, Philip, Netterfield, Calvin B., Olmi, Luca, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present an implementation of the iterative flux-conserving Lucy-Richardson (L-R) deconvolution method of image restoration for maps produced by the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST). We have analyzed its performance and convergence extensively through simulations and cross-correlations of the deconvolved images with available highresolution maps. We present new science results from two BLAST surveys, in the Galactic regions K3-50 and IC 5146, further demonstrating the benefits of performing this deconvolution. We have resolved three clumps within a radius of 4.'5 inside the star-forming molecular cloud containing K3-50. Combining the well-resolved dust emission map with available multi-wavelength data, we have constrained the Spectral Energy Distributions (SEDs) of five clumps to obtain masses (M), bolometric luminosities (L), and dust temperatures (T). The L-M diagram has been used as a diagnostic tool to estimate the evolutionary stages of the clumps. There are close relationships between dust continuum emission and both 21-cm radio continuum and 12CO molecular line emission. The restored extended large scale structures in the Northern Streamer of IC 5146 have a strong spatial correlation with both SCUBA and high resolution extinction images. A dust temperature of 12 K has been obtained for the central filament. We report physical properties of ten compact sources, including six associated protostars, by fitting SEDs to multi-wavelength data. All of these compact sources are still quite cold (typical temperature below ~ 16 K) and are above the critical Bonner-Ebert mass. They have associated low-power Young Stellar Objects (YSOs). Further evidence for starless clumps has also been found in the IC 5146 region., Comment: 13 pages, 12 Figures, 3 Tables
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. A Monte Carlo Approach to Evolution of the Far-Infrared Luminosity Function with BLAST
- Author
-
Marsden, Gaelen, Chapin, Edward L., Halpern, Mark, Patanchon, Guillaume, Scott, Douglas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Valiante, Elisabetta, Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We constrain the evolution of the rest-frame far-infrared (FIR) luminosity function out to high redshift, by combining several pieces of complementary information provided by the deep Balloon-borne Large-Aperture Submillimeter Telescope surveys at 250, 350 and 500 micron, as well as other FIR and millimetre data. Unlike most other phenomenological models, we characterise the uncertainties in our fitted parameters using Monte Carlo Markov Chains. We use a bivariate local luminosity function that depends only on FIR luminosity and 60-to-100 micron colour, along with a single library of galaxy spectral energy distributions indexed by colour, and apply simple luminosity and density evolution. We use the surface density of sources, Cosmic Infrared Background (CIB) measurements and redshift distributions of bright sources, for which identifications have been made, to constrain this model. The precise evolution of the FIR luminosity function across this crucial range has eluded studies at longer wavelengths (e.g., using SCUBA and MAMBO) and at shorter wavelengths (e.g., Spitzer), and should provide a key piece of information required for the study of galaxy evolution. Our adoption of Monte Carlo methods enables us not only to find the best-fit evolution model, but also to explore correlations between the fitted parameters. Our model-fitting approach allows us to focus on sources of tension coming from the combination of data-sets. We specifically find that our choice of parameterisation has difficulty fitting the combination of CIB measurements and redshift distribution of sources near 1 mm. Existing and future data sets will be able to dramatically improve the fits, as well as break strong degeneracies among the models. [abridged], Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures, accepted to MNRAS
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. The Balloon-Borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) 2005: A 10 deg^2 Survey of Star Formation in Cygnus X
- Author
-
Roy, Arabindo, Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Dicker, Simon R., France, Kevin, Gibb, Andrew G., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Martin, Peter G., Mauskopf, Philip, Ortiz, Jorge L. Morales, Netterfield, Calvin B., Noriega-Crespo, Alberto, Olmi, Luca, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We present Cygnus X in a new multi-wavelength perspective based on an unbiased BLAST survey at 250, 350, and 500 micron, combined with rich datasets for this well-studied region. Our primary goal is to investigate the early stages of high mass star formation. We have detected 184 compact sources in various stages of evolution across all three BLAST bands. From their well-constrained spectral energy distributions, we obtain the physical properties mass, surface density, bolometric luminosity, and dust temperature. Some of the bright sources reaching 40 K contain well-known compact H II regions. We relate these to other sources at earlier stages of evolution via the energetics as deduced from their position in the luminosity-mass (L-M) diagram. The BLAST spectral coverage, near the peak of the spectral energy distribution of the dust, reveals fainter sources too cool (~ 10 K) to be seen by earlier shorter-wavelength surveys like IRAS. We detect thermal emission from infrared dark clouds and investigate the phenomenon of cold ``starless cores" more generally. Spitzer images of these cold sources often show stellar nurseries, but these potential sites for massive star formation are ``starless" in the sense that to date there is no massive protostar in a vigorous accretion phase. We discuss evolution in the context of the L-M diagram. Theory raises some interesting possibilities: some cold massive compact sources might never form a cluster containing massive stars; and clusters with massive stars might not have an identifiable compact cold massive precursor., Comment: 42 pages, 31 Figures, 6 tables
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The BLAST View of the Star Forming Region in Aquila (ell=45deg,b=0deg)
- Author
-
Rivera-Ingraham, Alana, Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Dicker, Simon R., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Martin, Peter G., Mauskopf, Philip, Netterfield, Calvin B., Olmi, Luca, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Roy, Arabindo, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics - Abstract
We have carried out the first general submillimeter analysis of the field towards GRSMC 45.46+0.05, a massive star forming region in Aquila. The deconvolved 6 deg^2 (3\degree X 2\degree) maps provided by BLAST in 2005 at 250, 350, and 500 micron were used to perform a preliminary characterization of the clump population previously investigated in the infrared, radio, and molecular maps. Interferometric CORNISH data at 4.8 GHz have also been used to characterize the Ultracompact HII regions (UCHIIRs) within the main clumps. By means of the BLAST maps we have produced an initial census of the submillimeter structures that will be observed by Herschel, several of which are known Infrared Dark Clouds (IRDCs). Our spectral energy distributions of the main clumps in the field, located at ~7 kpc, reveal an active population with temperatures of T~35-40 K and masses of ~10^3 Msun for a dust emissivity index beta=1.5. The clump evolutionary stages range from evolved sources, with extended HII regions and prominent IR stellar population, to massive young stellar objects, prior to the formation of an UCHIIR.The CORNISH data have revealed the details of the stellar content and structure of the UCHIIRs. In most cases, the ionizing stars corresponding to the brightest radio detections are capable of accounting for the clump bolometric luminosity, in most cases powered by embedded OB stellar clusters.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Measuring star formation in high-z massive galaxies: A mid-infrared to submillimeter study of the GOODS NICMOS Survey sample
- Author
-
Viero, Marco P., Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Mentuch, Erin, Buitrago, Fernando, Bauer, Amanda. E., Chapin, Edward L., Conselice, Christopher J., Devlin, Mark J., Halpern, Mark, Marsden, Gaelen, Netterfield, Calvin B., Pascale, Enzo, Pérez-González, Pablo. G., Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Smith, Matthew W. L., Truch, Matthew D. P., Trujillo, Ignacio, and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present measurements of the mean mid-infrared-to-submillimeter flux densities of massive (M\ast \approx 2 \times 10^11 Msun) galaxies at redshifts 1.7 < z < 2.9, obtained by stacking positions of known objects taken from the GOODS NICMOS Survey (GNS) catalog on maps: at 24 {\mu}m (Spitzer/MIPS); 70, 100, and 160{\mu}m (Herschel/PACS); 250, 350, 500{\mu}m (BLAST); and 870{\mu}m (LABOCA). A modified blackbody spectrum fit to the stacked flux densities indicates a median [interquartile] star-formation rate of SFR = 63 [48, 81] Msun yr^-1 . We note that not properly accounting for correlations between bands when fitting stacked data can significantly bias the result. The galaxies are divided into two groups, disk-like and spheroid-like, according to their Sersic indices, n. We find evidence that most of the star formation is occurring in n \leq 2 (disk-like) galaxies, with median [interquartile] SFR = 122 [100,150] Msun yr^-1, while there are indications that the n > 2 (spheroid-like) population may be forming stars at a median [interquartile] SFR = 14 [9,20] Msun yr^-1, if at all. Finally, we show that star formation is a plausible mechanism for size evolution in this population as a whole, but find only marginal evidence that it is what drives the expansion of the spheroid-like galaxies., Comment: Accepted by MNRAS. 10 pages, 3 figures, 3 tables
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. A panchromatic study of BLAST counterparts: total star-formation rate, morphology, AGN fraction and stellar mass
- Author
-
Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Ade, Peter A. R., Chapin, Edward L., Cortese, Luca, Devlin, Mark J., Dye, Simon, Eales, Stephen, Griffin, Matthew, Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Marsden, Gaelen, Mauskopf, Philip, Netterfield, Calvin B., Pascale, Enzo, Scott, Douglas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Viero, Marco, and Wiebe, Donald
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We carry out a multi-wavelength study of individual galaxies detected by the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) and identified at other wavelengths, using data spanning the radio to the ultraviolet (UV). We develop a Monte Carlo method to account for flux boosting, source blending, and correlations among bands, which we use to derive deboosted far-infrared (FIR) luminosities for our sample. We estimate total star-formation rates for BLAST counterparts with z < 0.9 by combining their FIR and UV luminosities. Star formation is heavily obscured at L_FIR > 10^11 L_sun, z > 0.5, but the contribution from unobscured starlight cannot be neglected at L_FIR < 10^11 L_sun, z < 0.25. We assess that about 20% of the galaxies in our sample show indication of a type-1 active galactic nucleus (AGN), but their submillimeter emission is mainly due to star formation in the host galaxy. We compute stellar masses for a subset of 92 BLAST counterparts; these are relatively massive objects, with a median mass of ~10^11 M_sun, which seem to link the 24um and SCUBA populations, in terms of both stellar mass and star-formation activity. The bulk of the BLAST counterparts at z<1 appear to be run-of-the-mill star-forming galaxies, typically spiral in shape, with intermediate stellar masses and practically constant specific star-formation rates. On the other hand, the high-z tail of the BLAST counterparts significantly overlaps with the SCUBA population, in terms of both star-formation rates and stellar masses, with observed trends of specific star-formation rate that support strong evolution and downsizing., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. 44 pages, 11 figures. The SED template for the derivation of L_FIR has changed (added new figure) and the discussion on the stellar masses has been improved. The complete set of full-color postage-stamps can be found at http://blastexperiment.info/results_images/moncelsi/
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. BLAST Observations of the South Ecliptic Pole field: Number Counts and Source Catalogs
- Author
-
Valiante, Elisabetta, Ade, Peter, Bock, James, Braglia, Filiberto, Chapin, Edward, Devlin, Mark Joseph, Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua, Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter, Hughes, David, Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Mauskopf, Philip, Netterfield, Calvin, Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Scott, Kimberly, Semisch, Christopher, Stabenau, Hans, Thomas, Nicholas, Truch, Matthew, Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory, Viero, Marco, and Wiebe, Donald
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present results from a survey carried out by the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) on a 9 deg^2 field near the South Ecliptic Pole at 250, 350 and 500 {\mu}m. The median 1{\sigma} depths of the maps are 36.0, 26.4 and 18.4 mJy, respectively. We apply a statistical method to estimate submillimeter galaxy number counts and find that they are in agreement with other measurements made with the same instrument and with the more recent results from Herschel/SPIRE. Thanks to the large field observed, the new measurements give additional constraints on the bright end of the counts. We identify 132, 89 and 61 sources with S/N>4 at 250, 350, 500 {\mu}m, respectively and provide a multi-wavelength combined catalog of 232 sources with a significance >4{\sigma} in at least one BLAST band. The new BLAST maps and catalogs are available publicly at http://blastexperiment.info., Comment: 25 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables, Accepted by ApJS. Maps and catalogs available at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. The balloon-borne large-aperture submillimeter telescope for polarimetry: BLAST-Pol
- Author
-
Fissel, Laura M., Ade, Peter A. R., Angile, Francesco E., Benton, Steven J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Gandilo, Natalie N., Gundersen, Joshua O., Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeffrey, Korotkov, Andrei L., Marsden, Galen, Matthews, Tristan G., Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Mroczkowski, Tony K., Netterfield, C. Barth, Novak, Giles, Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Savini, Giorgio, Scott, Douglas, Shariff, Jamil A., Soler, Juan Diego, Thomas, Nicholas E., Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole E., Tucker, Gregory S., Ward-Thompson, Derek, and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope for Polarimetry (BLAST-Pol) is a suborbital mapping experiment designed to study the role played by magnetic fields in the star formation process. BLAST-Pol is the reconstructed BLAST telescope, with the addition of linear polarization capability. Using a 1.8 m Cassegrain telescope, BLAST-Pol images the sky onto a focal plane that consists of 280 bolometric detectors in three arrays, observing simultaneously at 250, 350, and 500 um. The diffraction-limited optical system provides a resolution of 30'' at 250 um. The polarimeter consists of photolithographic polarizing grids mounted in front of each bolometer/detector array. A rotating 4 K achromatic half-wave plate provides additional polarization modulation. With its unprecedented mapping speed and resolution, BLAST-Pol will produce three-color polarization maps for a large number of molecular clouds. The instrument provides a much needed bridge in spatial coverage between larger-scale, coarse resolution surveys and narrow field of view, and high resolution observations of substructure within molecular cloud cores. The first science flight will be from McMurdo Station, Antarctica in December 2010., Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures Submitted to SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation Conference 2010
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Submillimetre observations of galaxy clusters with BLAST: the star-formation activity in Abell 3112
- Author
-
Braglia, Filiberto G., Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Edge, Alastair, Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Mauskopf, Philip, Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Netterfield, Calvin B., Ngo, Henry, Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Pimbblet, Kevin A., Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Thomas, Nicholas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Valiante, Elisabetta, Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present observations at 250, 350, and 500 um of the nearby galaxy cluster Abell 3112 (z=0.075) carried out with BLAST, the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope. Five cluster members are individually detected as bright submillimetre sources. Their far-infrared SEDs and optical colours identify them as normal star-forming galaxies of high mass, with globally evolved stellar populations. They all have B-R colours of 1.38+/-0.08, transitional between the blue, active population and the red, evolved galaxies that dominate the cluster core. We stack to determine the mean submillimetre emission from all cluster members, which is determined to be 16.6+/-2.5, 6.1+/-1.9, and 1.5+/-1.3 mJy at 250, 350, and 500 um, respectively. Stacking analyses of the submillimetre emission of cluster members reveal trends in the mean far-infrared luminosity with respect to cluster-centric radius and Ks-band magnitude. We find that a large fraction of submillimetre emission comes from the boundary of the inner, virialized region of the cluster, at cluster-centric distances around R_500. Stacking also shows that the bulk of the submillimetre emission arises in intermediate-mass galaxies (L
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. The BLAST Survey of the Vela Molecular Cloud: Physical Properties of the Dense Cores in Vela-D
- Author
-
Olmi, Luca, Ade, Peter A. R., Angles-Alcazar, Daniel, Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., De Luca, Massimo, Devlin, Mark J., Dicker, Simon, Elia, Davide, Fazio, Giovanni G., Giannini, Teresa, Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Lorenzetti, Dario, Marengo, Massimo, Marsden, Gaelen, Martin, Peter G., Massi, Fabrizio, Mauskopf, Philip, Netterfield, Calvin B., Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Salama, Alberto, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Smith, Howard A., Strafella, Francesco, Thomas, Nicholas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
The Balloon-borne Large-Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) carried out a 250, 350 and 500 micron survey of the galactic plane encompassing the Vela Molecular Ridge, with the primary goal of identifying the coldest dense cores possibly associated with the earliest stages of star formation. Here we present the results from observations of the Vela-D region, covering about 4 square degrees, in which we find 141 BLAST cores. We exploit existing data taken with the Spitzer MIPS, IRAC and SEST-SIMBA instruments to constrain their (single-temperature) spectral energy distributions, assuming a dust emissivity index beta = 2.0. This combination of data allows us to determine the temperature, luminosity and mass of each BLAST core, and also enables us to separate starless from proto-stellar sources. We also analyze the effects that the uncertainties on the derived physical parameters of the individual sources have on the overall physical properties of starless and proto-stellar cores, and we find that there appear to be a smooth transition from the pre- to the proto-stellar phase. In particular, for proto-stellar cores we find a correlation between the MIPS24 flux, associated with the central protostar, and the temperature of the dust envelope. We also find that the core mass function of the Vela-D cores has a slope consistent with other similar (sub)millimeter surveys., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Data and maps are available at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. BLAST: the far-infrared/radio correlation in distant galaxies
- Author
-
Ivison, R. J., Alexander, David M., Biggs, Andy D., Brandt, W. N., Chapin, Edward L., Coppin, Kristen E. K., Devlin, Mark J., Dickinson, Mark, Dunlop, James, Dye, Simon, Eales, Stephen A., Frayer, David T., Halpern, Mark, Hughes, David H., Ibar, Edo, Kovacs, A., Marsden, Gaelen, Moncelsi, L., Netterfield, Calvin B., Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rafferty, D. A., Rex, Marie, Schinnerer, Eva, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, C., Smail, Ian, Swinbank, A. M., Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., Walter, Fabian, Weiss, Axel, Wiebe, Donald V., and Xue, Y. Q.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies - Abstract
We investigate the correlation between far-infrared (FIR) and radio luminosities in distant galaxies, a lynchpin of modern astronomy. We use data from the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimetre Telescope (BLAST), Spitzer, the Large Apex BOlometer CamerA (LABOCA), the Very Large Array (VLA) and the Giant Metre-wave Radio Telescope (GMRT) in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South (ECDFS). For a catalogue of BLAST 250-micron-selected galaxies, we re-measure the 70--870-micron flux densities at the positions of their most likely 24-micron counterparts, which have a median [interquartile] redshift of 0.74 [0.25, 1.57]. From these, we determine the monochromatic flux density ratio, q_250 = log_10 (S_250micron / S_1400MHz), and the bolometric equivalent, q_IR. At z ~= 0.6, where our 250-micron filter probes rest-frame 160-micron emission, we find no evolution relative to q_160 for local galaxies. We also stack the FIR and submm images at the positions of 24-micron- and radio-selected galaxies. The difference between q_IR seen for 250-micron- and radio-selected galaxies suggests star formation provides most of the IR luminosity in ~< 100-uJy radio galaxies, but rather less for those in the mJy regime. For the 24-micron sample, the radio spectral index is constant across 0 < z < 3, but q_IR exhibits tentative evidence of a steady decline such that q_IR is proportional to (1+z)^(-0.15 +/- 0.03) - significant evolution, spanning the epoch of galaxy formation, with major implications for techniques that rely on the FIR/radio correlation. We compare with model predictions and speculate that we may be seeing the increase in radio activity that gives rise to the radio background., Comment: MNRAS in press, Maps and data available at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. BLAST05: Power Spectra of Bright Galactic Cirrus at Submillimeter Wavelengths
- Author
-
Roy, Arabindo, Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Dicker, Simon R., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Martin, Peter G., Mauskopf, Philip, Miville-Deschenes, Marc-Antoine, Netterfield, Calvin B., Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We report multi-wavelength power spectra of diffuse Galactic dust emission from BLAST observations at 250, 350, and 500 microns in Galactic Plane fields in Cygnus X and Aquila. These submillimeter power spectra statistically quantify the self-similar structure observable over a broad range of scales and can be used to assess the cirrus noise which limits the detection of faint point sources. The advent of submillimeter surveys with the Herschel Space Observatory makes the wavelength dependence a matter of interest. We show that the observed relative amplitudes of the power spectra can be related through a spectral energy distribution (SED). Fitting a simple modified black body to this SED, we find the dust temperature in Cygnus X to be 19.9 +/- 1.3 K and in the Aquila region 16.9 +/- 0.7 K. Our empirical estimates provide important new insight into the substantial cirrus noise that will be encountered in forthcoming observations., Comment: Submitted to the Astrophysical Journal. Maps and other data are available at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Temperature Profiles and the Effect of AGN on Submillimeter Emission from BLAST Observations of Resolved Galaxies
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald V., Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Dicker, Simon, Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Martin, Peter G., Mauskopf, Philip, Netterfield, Calvin B., Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Thomas, Nicholas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., and Viero, Marco P.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Over the course of two flights, the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) made resolved maps of seven nearby (<25 Mpc) galaxies at 250, 350, and 500 microns. During its June 2005 flight from Sweden, BLAST observed a single nearby galaxy, NGC 4565. During the December 2006 flight from Antarctica, BLAST observed the nearby galaxies NGC 1097, NGC 1291, NGC 1365, NGC 1512, NGC 1566, and NGC 1808. We fit physical dust models to a combination of BLAST observations and other available data for the galaxies observed by Spitzer. We fit a modified blackbody to the remaining galaxies to obtain total dust mass and mean dust temperature. For the four galaxies with Spitzer data, we also produce maps and radial profiles of dust column density and temperature. We measure the fraction of BLAST detected flux originating from the central cores of these galaxies and use this to calculate a "core fraction," an upper limit on the "AGN fraction" of these galaxies. We also find our resolved observations of these galaxies give a dust mass estimate 5-19 times larger than an unresolved observations would predict. Finally, we are able to use these data to derive a value for the dust mass absorption co-efficient of kappa = 0.29 +/-0.03 m^2 kg^-1 at 250 microns. This study is an introduction to future higher-resolution and higher-sensitivity studies to be conducted by Herschel and SCUBA-II., Comment: Submitted to ApJ. Data and related maps available at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Submillimeter Number Counts From Statistical Analysis of BLAST Maps
- Author
-
Patanchon, Guillaume, Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Dicker, Simon R., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Mauskopf, Philip, Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Netterfield, Calvin B., Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Thomas, Nicholas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
We describe the application of a statistical method to estimate submillimeter galaxy number counts from confusion limited observations by the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST). Our method is based on a maximum likelihood fit to the pixel histogram, sometimes called 'P(D)', an approach which has been used before to probe faint counts, the difference being that here we advocate its use even for sources with relatively high signal-to-noise ratios. This method has an advantage over standard techniques of source extraction in providing an unbiased estimate of the counts from the bright end down to flux densities well below the confusion limit. We specifically analyse BLAST observations of a roughly 10 sq. deg. map centered on the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey South (GOODS-S) field. We provide estimates of number counts at the three BLAST wavelengths, 250, 350, and 500 microns; instead of counting sources in flux bins we estimate the counts at several flux density nodes connected with power-laws. We observe a generally very steep slope for the counts of about -3.7 at 250 microns and -4.5 at 350 and 500 microns, over the range ~0.02-0.5 Jy, breaking to a shallower slope below about 0.015 Jy at all three wavelengths. We also describe how to estimate the uncertainties and correlations in this method so that the results can be used for model-fitting. This method should be well-suited for analysis of data from the Herschel satellite., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal; see associated data and other papers at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. A Bright Submillimeter Source in the Bullet Cluster (1E0657--56) Field Detected with BLAST
- Author
-
Rex, Marie, Ade, Peter A. R., Aretxaga, Itziar, Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Dicker, Simon R., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Martin, Peter G., Mauskopf, Philip, Montana, Alfredo, Netterfield, Calvin B., Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Thomas, Nicholas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We present the 250, 350, and 500 micron detection of bright submillimeter emission in the direction of the Bullet Cluster measured by the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST). The 500 micron centroid is coincident with an AzTEC 1.1 mm point-source detection at a position close to the peak lensing magnification produced by the cluster. However, the 250 micron and 350 micron centroids are elongated and shifted toward the south with a differential shift between bands that cannot be explained by pointing uncertainties. We therefore conclude that the BLAST detection is likely contaminated by emission from foreground galaxies associated with the Bullet Cluster. The submillimeter redshift estimate based on 250-1100 micron photometry at the position of the AzTEC source is z_phot = 2.9 (+0.6 -0.3), consistent with the infrared color redshift estimation of the most likely IRAC counterpart. These flux densities indicate an apparent far-infrared luminosity of L_FIR = 2E13 Lsun. When the amplification due to the gravitational lensing of the cluster is removed, the intrinsic far-infrared luminosity of the source is found to be L_FIR <= 10^12 Lsun, consistent with typical luminous infrared galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Maps are available at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. BLAST: Resolving the Cosmic Submillimeter Background
- Author
-
Marsden, Gaelen, Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Dicker, Simon R., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Mauskopf, Philip, Magnelli, Benjamin, Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Netterfield, Calvin B., Ngo, Henry, Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Thomas, Nicholas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
The Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) has made one square degree, deep, confusion limited maps at three different bands, centered on the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey South field. By calculating the covariance of these maps with catalogs of 24 micron sources from the Far-Infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (FIDEL), we have determined that the total submillimeter intensities are 8.60 +/- 0.59, 4.93 +/- 0.34, and 2.27 +/- 0.20 nW m^2 sr^(-1) at 250, 350, and 500 micron, respectively. These numbers are more precise than previous estimates of the cosmic infrared background (CIB) and are consistent with 24 micron-selected galaxies generating the full intensity of the CIB. We find that the fraction of the CIB that originates from sources at z >= 1.2 increases with wavelength, with 60% from high redshift sources at 500 micron. At all BLAST wavelengths, the relative intensity of high-z sources is higher for 24 micron-faint sources than it is for 24 micron-bright sources. Galaxies identified as active galactic nuclei (AGN) by their Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) colors are 1.6-2.6 times brighter than the average population at 250-500 micron, consistent with what is found for X-ray-selected AGN. BzK-selected galaxies are found to be moderately brighter than typical 24 micron-selected galaxies in the BLAST bands. These data provide high precision constraints for models of the evolution of the number density and intensity of star forming galaxies at high redshift., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Maps are available at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Over half of the far-infrared background light comes from galaxies at z >= 1.2
- Author
-
Devlin, Mark J., Ade, Peter A. R., Aretxaga, Itziar, Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Martin, Peter G., Mauskopf, Philip, Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Netterfield, Calvin B., Ngo, Henry, Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Thomas, Nicholas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Submillimetre surveys during the past decade have discovered a population of luminous, high-redshift, dusty starburst galaxies. In the redshift range 1 <= z <= 4, these massive submillimetre galaxies go through a phase characterized by optically obscured star formation at rates several hundred times that in the local Universe. Half of the starlight from this highly energetic process is absorbed and thermally re-radiated by clouds of dust at temperatures near 30 K with spectral energy distributions peaking at 100 microns in the rest frame. At 1 <= z <= 4, the peak is redshifted to wavelengths between 200 and 500 microns. The cumulative effect of these galaxies is to yield extragalactic optical and far-infrared backgrounds with approximately equal energy densities. Since the initial detection of the far-infrared background (FIRB), higher-resolution experiments have sought to decompose this integrated radiation into the contributions from individual galaxies. Here we report the results of an extragalactic survey at 250, 350 and 500 microns. Combining our results at 500 microns with those at 24 microns, we determine that all of the FIRB comes from individual galaxies, with galaxies at z >= 1.2 accounting for 70 per cent of it. As expected, at the longest wavelengths the signal is dominated by ultraluminous galaxies at z > 1., Comment: Accepted to Nature. Maps available at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. BLAST: The Mass Function, Lifetimes, and Properties of Intermediate Mass Cores from a 50 Square Degree Submillimeter Galactic Survey in Vela (l = ~265)
- Author
-
Netterfield, Calvin. B., Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Martin, Peter G., Mauskopf, Phillip, Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Roy, Arabindo, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Thomas, Nicholas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Galaxy Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Solar and Stellar Astrophysics - Abstract
We present first results from an unbiased 50 deg^2 submillimeter Galactic survey at 250, 350, and 500 micron from the 2006 flight of the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST). The map has resolution ranging from 36 arcsec to 60 arcsec in the three submillimeter bands spanning the thermal emission peak of cold starless cores. We determine the temperature, luminosity, and mass of more than one thousand compact sources in a range of evolutionary stages and an unbiased statistical characterization of the population. From comparison with C^(18)O data, we find the dust opacity per gas mass, kappa r = 0.16 cm^2 g^(-1) at 250 micron, for cold clumps. We find that 2% of the mass of the molecular gas over this diverse region is in cores colder than 14 K, and that the mass function for these cold cores is consistent with a power law with index alpha = -3.22 +/- 0.14 over the mass range 14 M_sun < M < 80 M_sun. Additionally, we infer a mass-dependent cold core lifetime of t_c(M) = 4E6 (M/20 M_sun)^(-0.9) years - longer than what has been found in previous surveys of either low or high mass cores, and significantly longer than free fall or likely turbulent decay times. This implies some form of non-thermal support for cold cores during this early stage of star formation., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Maps available at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. BLAST: A Far-Infrared Measurement of the History of Star Formation
- Author
-
Pascale, Enzo, Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Dye, Simon, Eales, Steve A., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Mauskopf, Philip, Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Netterfield, Calvin B., Ngo, Henry, Olmi, Luca, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Thomas, Nicholas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We directly measure redshift evolution in the mean physical properties (far-infrared luminosity, temperature, and mass) of the galaxies that produce the cosmic infrared background (CIB), using measurements from the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Sub-millimeter Telescope (BLAST), and Spitzer which constrain the CIB emission peak. This sample is known to produce a surface brightness in the BLAST bands consistent with the full CIB, and photometric redshifts are identified for all of the objects. We find that most of the 70 micron background is generated at z <~ 1 and the 500 micron background generated at z >~ 1. A significant growth is observed in the mean luminosity from ~ 10^9 - 10^12 L_sun, and in the mean temperature by 10 K, from redshifts 0< z < 3. However, there is only weak positive evolution in the comoving dust mass in these galaxies across the same redshift range. We also measure the evolution of the far-infrared luminosity density, and the star-formation rate history for these objects, finding good agreement with other infrared studies up to z ~1, exceeding the contribution attributed to optically-selected galaxies., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Maps available at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Radio and mid-infrared identification of BLAST source counterparts in the Chandra Deep Field South
- Author
-
Dye, Simon, Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Dunlop, James S., Eales, Stephen A., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Magnelli, Benjamin, Marsden, Gaelen, Mauskopf, Philip, Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Netterfield, Calvin B., Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Targett, Tom, Thomas, Nicholas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We have identified radio and/or mid-infrared counterparts to 198 out of 350 sources detected at >=5 sigma over ~ 9 square degrees centered on the Chandra Deep Field South (CDFS) by the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) at 250, 350 and 500 um. We have matched 114 of these counterparts to optical sources with previously derived photometric redshifts and fitted SEDs to the BLAST fluxes and fluxes at 70 and 160 um acquired with the Spitzer Space Telescope. In this way, we have constrained dust temperatures, total far-infrared/sub-millimeter luminosities and star formation rates for each source. Our findings show that on average, the BLAST sources lie at significantly lower redshifts and have significantly lower rest-frame dust temperatures compared to submm sources detected in surveys conducted at 850 um. We demonstrate that an apparent increase in dust temperature with redshift in our sample arises as a result of selection effects. Finally, we provide the full multi-wavelength catalog of >= 5 sigma BLAST sources contained within the complete ~ 9 square degree survey area., Comment: Published in the Astrophysical Journal: 2009, ApJ, 703, 285. 23 pages, 13 figures. Data available at http://blastexperiment.info
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. The Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) 2006: Calibration and Flight Performance
- Author
-
Truch, Matthew D. P., Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Dicker, Simon R., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, Marsden, Gaelen, Martin, Peter G., Mauskopf, Philip, Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Netterfield, Calvin B., Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Thomas, Nicholas E., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., Viero, Marco P., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics - Abstract
The Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) operated successfully during a 250-hour flight over Antarctica in December 2006 (BLAST06). As part of the calibration and pointing procedures, the red hypergiant star VY CMa was observed and used as the primary calibrator. Details of the overall BLAST06 calibration procedure are discussed. The 1-sigma absolute calibration is accurate to 10, 12, and 13% at the 250, 350, and 500 micron bands, respectively. The errors are highly correlated between bands resulting in much lower error for the derived shape of the 250-500 micron continuum. The overall pointing error is <5" rms for the 36, 42, and 60" beams. The performance of the optics and pointing systems is discussed., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Maps available at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. BLAST: Correlations in the Cosmic Far-Infrared Background at 250, 350, and 500 microns Reveal Clustering of Star-Forming Galaxies
- Author
-
Viero, Marco P., Ade, Peter A. R., Bock, James J., Chapin, Edward L., Devlin, Mark J., Griffin, Matthew, Gundersen, Joshua O., Halpern, Mark, Hargrave, Peter C., Hughes, David H., Klein, Jeff, MacTavish, Carrie J., Marsden, Gaelen, Martin, Peter G., Mauskopf, Philip, Moncelsi, Lorenzo, Negrello, Mattia, Netterfield, Calvin B., Olmi, Luca, Pascale, Enzo, Patanchon, Guillaume, Rex, Marie, Scott, Douglas, Semisch, Christopher, Thomas, Nicholas, Truch, Matthew D. P., Tucker, Carole, Tucker, Gregory S., and Wiebe, Donald V.
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
We detect correlations in the cosmic far-infrared background due to the clustering of star-forming galaxies in observations made with the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope, BLAST, at 250, 350, and 500 microns. We perform jackknife and other tests to confirm the reality of the signal. The measured correlations are well fit by a power law over scales of 5-25 arcminutes, with Delta I/I = 15.1 +/- 1.7%. We adopt a specific model for submillimeter sources in which the contribution to clustering comes from sources in the redshift ranges 1.3 <= z <= 2.2, 1.5 <= z <= 2.7, and 1.7 <= z <= 3.2, at 250, 350, and 500 microns, respectively. With these distributions, our measurement of the power spectrum, P(k_theta), corresponds to linear bias parameters, b = 3.8 +/- 0.6, 3.9 +/- 0.6 and 4.4 +/- 0.7, respectively. We further interpret the results in terms of the halo model, and find that at the smaller scales, the simplest halo model fails to fit our results. One way to improve the fit is to increase the radius at which dark matter halos are artificially truncated in the model, which is equivalent to having some star-forming galaxies at z >= 1 located in the outskirts of groups and clusters. In the context of this model we find a minimum halo mass required to host a galaxy is log (M_min / M_sun) = 11.5 (+0.4/-0.1), and we derive effective biases $b_eff = 2.2 +/- 0.2, 2.4 +/- 0.2, and 2.6 +/- 0.2, and effective masses log (M_eff / M_sun) = 12.9 +/- 0.3, 12.8 +/- 0.2, and 12.7 +/- 0.2, at 250, 350, and 500 microns, corresponding to spatial correlation lengths of r_0 = 4.9, 5.0, and 5.2 +/- 0.7 h^-1 Mpc, respectively. Finally, we discuss implications for clustering measurement strategies with Herschel and Planck., Comment: Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal. Maps and other results available at http://blastexperiment.info/
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. BLAST Autonomous Daytime Star Cameras
- Author
-
Rex, Marie, Chapin, Edward, Devlin, Mark J., Gundersen, Joshua, Klein, Jeff, Pascale, Enzo, and Wiebe, Donald
- Subjects
Astrophysics - Abstract
We have developed two redundant daytime star cameras to provide the fine pointing solution for the balloon-borne submillimeter telescope, BLAST. The cameras are capable of providing a reconstructed pointing solution with an absolute accuracy < 5 arcseconds. They are sensitive to stars down to magnitudes ~ 9 in daytime float conditions. Each camera combines a 1 megapixel CCD with a 200 mm f/2 lens to image a 2 degree x 2.5 degree field of the sky. The instruments are autonomous. An internal computer controls the temperature, adjusts the focus, and determines a real-time pointing solution at 1 Hz. The mechanical details and flight performance of these instruments are presented., Comment: 8 pages, 6 figures, 1 table. To be published in conference proceedings for the "Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy" part of the SPIE Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation Symposium that will be held 24-31 May 2006 in Orlando, FL
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. The Western Epistemic Tradition and the Scientific Study of Religion
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald, primary
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. The Science of Religion: A Defence
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald, primary
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Detection of Cosmological 21 cm Emission with the Canadian Hydrogen Intensity Mapping Experiment
- Author
-
Amiri, Mandana, additional, Bandura, Kevin, additional, Chen, Tianyue, additional, Deng, Meiling, additional, Dobbs, Matt, additional, Fandino, Mateus, additional, Foreman, Simon, additional, Halpern, Mark, additional, Hill, Alex S., additional, Hinshaw, Gary, additional, Höfer, Carolin, additional, Kania, Joseph, additional, Landecker, T. L., additional, MacEachern, Joshua, additional, Masui, Kiyoshi, additional, Mena-Parra, Juan, additional, Milutinovic, Nikola, additional, Mirhosseini, Arash, additional, Newburgh, Laura, additional, Ordog, Anna, additional, Pen, Ue-Li, additional, Pinsonneault-Marotte, Tristan, additional, Polzin, Ava, additional, Reda, Alex, additional, Renard, Andre, additional, Shaw, J. Richard, additional, Siegel, Seth R., additional, Singh, Saurabh, additional, Vanderlinde, Keith, additional, Wang, Haochen, additional, Wiebe, Donald V., additional, and Wulf, Dallas, additional
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Documenting the Delusion: A Case Study
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald and Martin, Luther H.
- Published
- 2015
50. Diverse Cultural Contributions to a 'Science of Religion': An Emerging Asia-Europe Dialogue on the Scientific Study of Religion
- Author
-
Wiebe, Donald and Bala, Arun, editor
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.