9,762 results on '"cosmology observations"'
Search Results
2. Four Fundamental Foreground Power Spectrum Shapes for 21 cm Cosmology Observations
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Morales, Miguel F., Hazelton, Bryna, Sullivan, Ian, and Beardsley, Adam
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Astrophysics - Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Astrophysics - Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics - Abstract
Contamination from instrumental effects interacting with bright astrophysical sources is the primary impediment to measuring Epoch of Reionization and BAO 21 cm power spectra---an effect called mode-mixing. In this paper we identify four fundamental power spectrum shapes produced by mode-mixing that will affect all upcoming observations. We are able, for the first time, to explain the wedge-like structure seen in advanced simulations and to forecast the shape of an 'EoR window' that is mostly free of contamination. Understanding the origins of these contaminations also enables us to identify calibration and foreground subtraction errors below the imaging limit, providing a powerful new tool for precision observations., Comment: Accepted for publication in ApJ, minor clarifications in the text
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- 2012
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3. The gravitational lensing imprints of DES Y3 superstructures on the CMB: a matched filtering approach
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Demirbozan, U, Nadathur, S, Ferrero, I, Fosalba, P, Kovács, A, Miquel, R, Davies, CT, Pandey, S, Adamow, M, Bechtol, K, Drlica-Wagner, A, Gruendl, RA, Hartley, WG, Pieres, A, Ross, AJ, Rykoff, ES, Sheldon, E, Yanny, B, Abbott, TMC, Aguena, M, Allam, S, Alves, O, Bacon, D, Bertin, E, Bocquet, S, Brooks, D, Rosell, A Carnero, Carretero, J, Cawthon, R, da Costa, LN, Pereira, MES, De Vicente, J, Desai, S, Doel, P, Everett, S, Flaugher, B, Friedel, D, Frieman, J, Gatti, M, Gaztanaga, E, Giannini, G, Gutierrez, G, Hinton, SR, Hollowood, DL, James, DJ, Jeffrey, N, Kuehn, K, Lahav, O, Lee, S, Marshall, JL, Mena-Fernández, J, Mohr, JJ, Myles, J, Ogando, RLC, Malagón, AA Plazas, Roodman, A, Sanchez, E, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Smith, M, Soares-Santos, M, Suchyta, E, Swanson, MEC, Tarle, G, Weaverdyck, N, Weller, J, and Wiseman, P
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Particle and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,gravitational lensing: weak ,cosmic background radiation ,cosmological parameters ,large-scale structure of Universe ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
ABSTRACT: Low-density cosmic voids gravitationally lens the cosmic microwave background (CMB), leaving a negative imprint on the CMB convergence $\kappa$. This effect provides insight into the distribution of matter within voids, and can also be used to study the growth of structure. We measure this lensing imprint by cross-correlating the Planck CMB lensing convergence map with voids identified in the Dark Energy Survey Year 3 (DES Y3) data set, covering approximately 4200 deg$^2$ of the sky. We use two distinct void-finding algorithms: a 2D void-finder that operates on the projected galaxy density field in thin redshift shells, and a new code, Voxel, which operates on the full 3D map of galaxy positions. We employ an optimal matched filtering method for cross-correlation, using the Marenostrum Institut de Ciències de l’Espai N-body simulation both to establish the template for the matched filter and to calibrate detection significances. Using the DES Y3 photometric luminous red galaxy sample, we measure $A_\kappa$, the amplitude of the observed lensing signal relative to the simulation template, obtaining $A_\kappa = 1.03 \pm 0.22$ ($4.6\sigma$ significance) for Voxel and $A_\kappa = 1.02 \pm 0.17$ ($5.9\sigma$ significance) for 2D voids, both consistent with Lambda cold dark matter expectations. We additionally invert the 2D void-finding process to identify superclusters in the projected density field, for which we measure $A_\kappa = 0.87 \pm 0.15$ ($5.9\sigma$ significance). The leading source of noise in our measurements is Planck noise, implying that data from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope, South Pole Telescope and CMB-S4 will increase sensitivity and allow for more precise measurements.
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- 2024
4. Model-independent gamma-ray bursts constraints on cosmological models using machine learning
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Zhang, Bin, Wang, Huifeng, Nong, Xiaodong, Wang, GuangZhen, Wu, Puxun, and Liang, Nan
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- 2025
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5. The intrinsic alignment of red galaxies in DES Y1 redMaPPer galaxy clusters
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Zhou, C, Tong, A, Troxel, MA, Blazek, J, Lin, C, Bacon, D, Bleem, L, Chang, C, Costanzi, M, DeRose, J, Dietrich, JP, Drlica-Wagner, A, Gruen, D, Gruendl, RA, Hoyle, B, Jarvis, M, MacCrann, N, Mawdsley, B, McClintock, T, Melchior, P, Prat, J, Pujol, A, Rozo, E, Rykoff, ES, Samuroff, S, Sheldon, E, Shin, T, Rosell, A Carnero, Yanny, B, Sánchez, C, Tucker, DL, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Zuntz, J, Varga, TN, Zhang, Y, Alves, O, Amon, A, Bertin, E, Brooks, D, Burke, DL, Kind, M Carrasco, da Costa, LN, Davis, TM, De Vicente, J, Desai, S, Diehl, HT, Doel, P, Everett, S, Ferrero, I, Flaugher, B, Frieman, J, Gerdes, DW, Gutierrez, G, Hinton, SR, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, James, DJ, Jeltema, T, Kuehn, K, Lahav, O, Lima, M, Marshall, JL, Mena-Fernández, J, Menanteau, F, Miquel, R, Palmese, A, Paz-Chinchón, F, Pieres, A, Malagón, AA Plazas, Porredon, A, Raveri, M, Romer, AK, Sanchez, E, Smith, M, Soares-Santos, M, Suchyta, E, Swanson, MEC, Tarle, G, To, C, Weaverdyck, N, Weller, J, and Wiseman, P
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Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Physical Sciences ,gravitational lensing: weak ,galaxies: clusters: general ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
Clusters of galaxies trace the most non-linear peaks in the cosmic density field. The weak gravitational lensing of background galaxies by clusters can allow us to infer their masses. However, galaxies associated with the local environment of the cluster can also be intrinsically aligned due to the local tidal gradient, contaminating any cosmology derived from the lensing signal. We measure this intrinsic alignment in Dark Energy Survey (DES) Year 1 REDMAPPER clusters. We find evidence of a non-zero mean radial alignment of galaxies within clusters between redshifts 0.1–0.7. We find a significant systematic in the measured ellipticities of cluster satellite galaxies that we attribute to the central galaxy flux and other intracluster light. We attempt to correct this signal, and fit a simple model for intrinsic alignment amplitude (AIA) to the measurement, finding AIA = 0.15 ± 0.04, when excluding data near the edge of the cluster. We find a significantly stronger alignment of the central galaxy with the cluster dark matter halo at low redshift and with higher richness and central galaxy absolute magnitude (proxies for cluster mass). This is an important demonstration of the ability of large photometric data sets like DES to provide direct constraints on the intrinsic alignment of galaxies within clusters. These measurements can inform improvements to small-scale modelling and simulation of the intrinsic alignment of galaxies to help improve the separation of the intrinsic alignment signal in weak lensing studies.
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- 2023
6. A data compression and optimal galaxy weights scheme for Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument and weak lensing data sets
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Ruggeri, Rossana, Blake, Chris, DeRose, Joseph, Garcia-Quintero, C, Hadzhiyska, B, Ishak, M, Jeffrey, N, Joudaki, S, Krolewski, Alex, Lange, JU, Leauthaud, A, Porredon, A, Rossi, G, Saulder, C, Xhakaj, E, Brooks, D, Dhungana, G, de la Macorra, A, Doel, P, Gontcho, S Gontcho A, Kremin, A, Landriau, M, Miquel, R, Poppett, C, Prada, F, and Tarlé, Gregory
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Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,gravitational lensing: weak ,methods: statistical ,large-scale structure of Universe ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
Combining different observational probes, such as galaxy clustering and weak lensing, is a promising technique for unveiling the physics of the Universe with upcoming dark energy experiments. The galaxy redshift sample from the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) will have a significant overlap with major ongoing imaging surveys specifically designed for weak lensing measurements: The Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS), the Dark Energy Survey (DES), and the Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) survey. In this work, we analyse simulated redshift and lensing catalogues to establish a new strategy for combining high-quality cosmological imaging and spectroscopic data, in view of the first-year data assembly analysis of DESI. In a test case fitting for a reduced parameter set, we employ an optimal data compression scheme able to identify those aspects of the data that are most sensitive to cosmological information and amplify them with respect to other aspects of the data. We find this optimal compression approach is able to preserve all the information related to the growth of structures.
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- 2023
7. The discovery of the beginning
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- 2024
8. Target selection for the DESI Peculiar Velocity Survey
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Saulder, Christoph, Howlett, Cullan, Douglass, Kelly A, Said, Khaled, BenZvi, Segev, Ahlen, Steven, Aldering, Greg, Bailey, Stephen, Brooks, David, Davis, Tamara M, de la Macorra, Axel, Dey, Arjun, Font-Ribera, Andreu, Forero-Romero, Jaime E, Gontcho, Satya Gontcho A, Honscheid, Klaus, Kim, Alex G, Kisner, Theodore, Kremin, Anthony, Landriau, Martin, Levi, Michael E, Lucey, John, Meisner, Aaron M, Miquel, Ramon, Moustakas, John, Myers, Adam D, Palanque-Delabrouille, Nathalie, Percival, Will, Poppett, Claire, Prada, Francisco, Qin, Fei, Schubnell, Michael, Tarlé, Gregory, Magaña, Mariana Vargas, Weaver, Benjamin Alan, Zhou, Rongpu, Zhou, Zhimin, and Zou, Hu
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Space Sciences ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,surveys ,galaxies: distances and redshifts ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
We describe the target selection and characteristics of the DESI Peculiar Velocity Survey, the largest survey of peculiar velocities (PVs) using both the fundamental plane (FP) and the Tully-Fisher (TF) relationship planned to date. We detail how we identify suitable early-type galaxies (ETGs) for the FP and suitable late-type galaxies (LTGs) for the TF relation using the photometric data provided by the DESI Legacy Imaging Survey DR9. Subsequently, we provide targets for 373 533 ETGs and 118 637 LTGs within the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) 5-yr footprint. We validate these photometric selections using existing morphological classifications. Furthermore, we demonstrate using survey validation data that DESI is able to measure the spectroscopic properties to sufficient precision to obtain PVs for our targets. Based on realistic DESI fibre assignment simulations and spectroscopic success rates, we predict the final DESI PV Survey will obtain ∼133 000 FP-based and ∼53 000 TF-based PV measurements over an area of 14 000 deg2. We forecast the ability of using these data to measure the clustering of galaxy positions and PVs from the combined DESI PV and Bright Galaxy Surveys (BGS), which allows for cancellation of cosmic variance at low redshifts. With these forecasts, we anticipate a 4 per cent statistical measurement on the growth rate of structure at z < 0.15. This is over two times better than achievable with redshifts from the BGS alone. The combined DESI PV and BGS will enable the most precise tests to date of the time and scale dependence of large-scale structure growth at z < 0.15.
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- 2023
9. DESI and DECaLS (D&D): galaxy–galaxy lensing measurements with 1 per cent survey and its forecast
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Yao, Ji, Shan, Huanyuan, Zhang, Pengjie, Jullo, Eric, Kneib, Jean-Paul, Yu, Yu, Zu, Ying, Brooks, David, de la Macorra, Axel, Doel, Peter, Font-Ribera, Andreu, Gontcho, Satya Gontcho A, Kisner, Theodore, Landriau, Martin, Meisner, Aaron, Miquel, Ramon, Nie, Jundan, Poppett, Claire, Prada, Francisco, Schubnell, Michael, Magana, Mariana Vargas, and Zhou, Zhimin
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Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,gravitational lensing: weak ,(cosmology:) large-scale structure of Universe ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
The shear measurement from the Dark Energy Camera Legacy Survey (DECaLS) provides an excellent opportunity for galaxy-galaxy lensing study with the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) galaxies, given the large (∼9000 deg2) sky overlap. We explore this potential by combining the DESI 1 per cent survey and DECaLS Data Release 8 (DR8). With ∼106 deg2 sky overlap, we achieve significant detection of galaxy-galaxy lensing for Bright Galaxy Survey (BGS) and luminous red galaxy (LRG) as lenses. Scaled to the full BGS sample, we expect the statistical errors to improve from to a promising level of at. This brings stronger requirements for future systematics control. To fully realize such potential, we need to control the residual multiplicative shear bias |m| < 0.006 and the bias in the mean redshift |Δz| < 0.008, requiring the introduced bias in the measurement is
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- 2023
10. First test of the consistency relation for the large-scale structure using the anisotropic three-point correlation function of BOSS DR12 galaxies
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Sugiyama, Naonori S, Yamauchi, Daisuke, Kobayashi, Tsutomu, Fujita, Tomohiro, Arai, Shun, Hirano, Shin’ichi, Saito, Shun, Beutler, Florian, and Seo, Hee-Jong
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Particle and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,large-scale structure of Universe ,dark matter ,cosmology: observations ,cosmology: theory ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
We present, for the first time, an observational test of the consistency relation for the large-scale structure (LSS) of the Universe through a joint analysis of the anisotropic two- and three-point correlation functions (2PCF and 3PCF) of galaxies. We parameterize the breakdown of the LSS consistency relation in the squeezed limit by Es, which represents the ratio of the coefficients of the shift terms in the second-order density and velocity fluctuations. Es ≠ 1 is a sufficient condition under which the LSS consistency relation is violated. A novel aspect of this work is that we constrain Es by obtaining information about the non-linear velocity field from the quadrupole component of the 3PCF without taking the squeezed limit. Using the galaxy catalogues in the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) Data Release 12, we obtain, indicating that there is no violation of the LSS consistency relation in our analysis within the statistical errors. Our parameterization is general enough that our constraint can be applied to a wide range of theories, such as multicomponent fluids, modified gravity theories, and their associated galaxy bias effects. Our analysis opens a new observational window to test the fundamental physics using the anisotropic higher-order correlation functions of galaxy clustering.
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- 2023
11. Dark Energy Survey Year 3 results: magnification modelling and impact on cosmological constraints from galaxy clustering and galaxy–galaxy lensing
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Elvin-Poole, J, MacCrann, N, Everett, S, Prat, J, Rykoff, ES, De Vicente, J, Yanny, B, Herner, K, Ferté, A, Di Valentino, E, Choi, A, Burke, DL, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Alarcon, A, Alves, O, Amon, A, Andrade-Oliveira, F, Baxter, E, Bechtol, K, Becker, MR, Bernstein, GM, Blazek, J, Camacho, H, Campos, A, Rosell, A Carnero, Kind, M Carrasco, Cawthon, R, Chang, C, Chen, R, Cordero, J, Crocce, M, Davis, C, DeRose, J, Diehl, HT, Dodelson, S, Doux, C, Drlica-Wagner, A, Eckert, K, Eifler, TF, Elsner, F, Fang, X, Fosalba, P, Friedrich, O, Gatti, M, Giannini, G, Gruen, D, Gruendl, RA, Harrison, I, Hartley, WG, Huang, H, Huff, EM, Huterer, D, Krause, E, Kuropatkin, N, Leget, P-F, Lemos, P, Liddle, AR, McCullough, J, Muir, J, Myles, J, Navarro-Alsina, A, Pandey, S, Park, Y, Porredon, A, Raveri, M, Rodriguez-Monroy, M, Rollins, RP, Roodman, A, Rosenfeld, R, Ross, AJ, Sánchez, C, Sanchez, J, Secco, LF, Sheldon, E, Shin, T, Troxel, MA, Tutusaus, I, Varga, TN, Weaverdyck, N, Wechsler, RH, Yin, B, Zhang, Y, Zuntz, J, Aguena, M, Avila, S, Bacon, D, Bertin, E, Bocquet, S, Brooks, D, García-Bellido, J, Honscheid, K, Jarvis, M, Li, TS, Mena-Fernández, J, To, C, Wilkinson, RD, and Collaboration, DES
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Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,cosmology: observations ,cosmological parameters ,gravitational lensing: weak ,large-scale structure of Universe ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
We study the effect of magnification in the Dark Energy Survey Year 3 analysis of galaxy clustering and galaxy-galaxy lensing, using two different lens samples: a sample of luminous red galaxies, redMaGiC, and a sample with a redshift-dependent magnitude limit, MagLim. We account for the effect of magnification on both the flux and size selection of galaxies, accounting for systematic effects using the Balrog image simulations. We estimate the impact of magnification on the galaxy clustering and galaxy-galaxy lensing cosmology analysis, finding it to be a significant systematic for the MagLim sample. We show cosmological constraints from the galaxy clustering autocorrelation and galaxy-galaxy lensing signal with different magnifications priors, finding broad consistency in cosmological parameters in ΛCDM and wCDM. However, when magnification bias amplitude is allowed to be free, we find the two-point correlation functions prefer a different amplitude to the fiducial input derived from the image simulations. We validate the magnification analysis by comparing the cross-clustering between lens bins with the prediction from the baseline analysis, which uses only the autocorrelation of the lens bins, indicating that systematics other than magnification may be the cause of the discrepancy. We show that adding the cross-clustering between lens redshift bins to the fit significantly improves the constraints on lens magnification parameters and allows uninformative priors to be used on magnification coefficients, without any loss of constraining power or prior volume concerns.
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- 2023
12. New constraints on cosmological modified gravity theories from anisotropic three-point correlation functions of BOSS DR12 galaxies
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Sugiyama, Naonori S, Yamauchi, Daisuke, Kobayashi, Tsutomu, Fujita, Tomohiro, Arai, Shun, Hirano, Shin’ichi, Saito, Shun, Beutler, Florian, and Seo, Hee-Jong
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Particle and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,dark matter ,large-scale structure of Universe ,cosmology: observations ,cosmology: theory ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
We report a new test of modified gravity theories using the large-scale structure of the Universe. This paper is the first attempt to (1) apply a joint analysis of the anisotropic components of galaxy two- and three-point correlation functions (2 and 3PCFs) to actual galaxy data and (2) constrain the non-linear effects of degenerate higher-order scalar-tensor (DHOST) theories on cosmological scales. Applying this analysis to the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS) data release 12, we obtain the lower bounds of -1.655 < ζt and -0.504 < ζs at the confidence level on the parameters characterizing the time evolution of the tidal and shift terms of the second-order velocity field. These constraints are consistent with GR predictions of ζt = 15/1144 and ζs = 0. Moreover, they represent a 35-fold and 20-fold improvement, respectively, over the joint analysis with only the isotropic 3PCF. We ensure the validity of our results by investigating various quantities, including theoretical models of the 3PCF, window function corrections, cumulative S/N, Fisher matrices, and statistical scattering effects of mock simulation data. We also find statistically significant discrepancies between the BOSS data and the Patchy mocks for the 3PCF measurement. Finally, we package all of our 3PCF analysis codes under the name hitomi and make them publicly available so that readers can reproduce all the results of this paper and easily apply them to ongoing future galaxy surveys.
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- 2023
13. Mapping gas around massive galaxies: cross-correlation of DES Y3 galaxies and Compton-y maps from SPT and Planck
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Sánchez, J, Omori, Y, Chang, C, Bleem, LE, Crawford, T, Drlica-Wagner, A, Raghunathan, S, Zacharegkas, G, Abbott, TMC, Aguena, M, Alarcon, A, Allam, S, Alves, O, Amon, A, Avila, S, Baxter, E, Bechtol, K, Benson, BA, Bernstein, GM, Bertin, E, Bocquet, S, Brooks, D, Burke, DL, Campos, A, Carlstrom, JE, Rosell, A Carnero, Kind, M Carrasco, Carretero, J, Castander, FJ, Cawthon, R, Chang, CL, Chen, A, Choi, A, Chown, R, Costanzi, M, Crites, AT, Crocce, M, da Costa, LN, Pereira, MES, de Haan, T, De Vicente, J, DeRose, J, Desai, S, Diehl, HT, Dobbs, MA, Dodelson, S, Doel, P, Elvin-Poole, J, Everett, W, Everett, S, Ferrero, I, Flaugher, B, Fosalba, P, Frieman, J, García-Bellido, J, Gatti, M, George, EM, Gerdes, DW, Giannini, G, Gruen, D, Gruendl, RA, Gschwend, J, Gutierrez, G, Halverson, NW, Hinton, SR, Holder, GP, Hollowood, DL, Holzapfel, WL, Honscheid, K, Hrubes, JD, James, DJ, Knox, L, Kuehn, K, Kuropatkin, N, Lahav, O, Lee, AT, Luong-Van, D, MacCrann, N, Marshall, JL, McCullough, J, McMahon, JJ, Melchior, P, Mena-Fernández, J, Menanteau, F, Miquel, R, Mocanu, L, Mohr, JJ, Muir, J, Myles, J, Natoli, T, Padin, S, Palmese, A, Pandey, S, Paz-Chinchón, F, Pieres, A, Malagón, AA Plazas, Porredon, A, Pryke, C, Raveri, M, and Reichardt, CL
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Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Physical Sciences ,galaxies: structure ,large-scale structure of Universe ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
We cross-correlate positions of galaxies measured in data from the first three years of the Dark Energy Survey with Compton-y maps generated using data from the South Pole Telescope (SPT) and the Planck mission. We model this cross-correlation measurement together with the galaxy autocorrelation to constrain the distribution of gas in the Universe. We measure the hydrostatic mass bias or, equivalently, the mean halo bias-weighted electron pressure (bh Pe), using large-scale information. We find (bh Pe) to be [0.16+−000403, 0.28+−000504, 0.45+−001006, 0.54+−000708, 0.61+−000608, 0.63+−000807] meV cm−3 at redshifts z ∼ [0.30, 0.46, 0.62, 0.77, 0.89, 0.97]. These values are consistent with previous work where measurements exist in the redshift range. We also constrain the mean gas profile using small-scale information, enabled by the high-resolution of the SPT data. We compare our measurements to different parametrized profiles based on the cosmo-OWLS hydrodynamical simulations. We find that our data are consistent with the simulation that assumes an AGN heating temperature of 108.5 K but are incompatible with the model that assumes an AGN heating temperature of 108.0 K. These comparisons indicate that the data prefer a higher value of electron pressure than the simulations within r500c of the galaxies’ haloes.
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- 2023
14. Intrinsic alignment as an RSD contaminant in the DESI survey
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Lamman, Claire, Eisenstein, Daniel, Aguilar, Jessica Nicole, Brooks, David, de la Macorra, Axel, Doel, Peter, Font-Ribera, Andreu, Gontcho, Satya Gontcho A, Honscheid, Klaus, Kehoe, Robert, Kisner, Theodore, Kremin, Anthony, Landriau, Martin, Levi, Michael, Miquel, Ramon, Moustakas, John, Palanque-Delabrouille, Nathalie, Poppett, Claire, Schubnell, Michael, and Tarlé, Gregory
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Space Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Bioengineering ,methods: data analysis ,dark energy ,large-scale structure of Universe ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
We measure the tidal alignment of the major axes of luminous red galaxies (LRGs) from the Legacy Imaging Survey and use it to infer the artificial redshift-space distortion signature that will arise from an orientation-dependent, surface-brightness selection in the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) survey. Using photometric redshifts to downweight the shape–density correlations due to weak lensing, we measure the intrinsic tidal alignment of LRGs. Separately, we estimate the net polarization of LRG orientations from DESI’s fibre-magnitude target selection to be of order 10-2 along the line of sight. Using these measurements and a linear tidal model, we forecast a 0.5 per cent fractional decrease on the quadrupole of the two-point correlation function for projected separations of 40–80 h-1 Mpc. We also use a halo catalogue from the ABACUSSUMMIT cosmological simulation suite to reproduce this false quadrupole.
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- 2023
15. Robust sampling for weak lensing and clustering analyses with the Dark Energy Survey
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Lemos, P, Weaverdyck, N, Rollins, RP, Muir, J, Ferté, A, Liddle, AR, Campos, A, Huterer, D, Raveri, M, Zuntz, J, Di Valentino, E, Fang, X, Hartley, WG, Aguena, M, Allam, S, Annis, J, Bertin, E, Bocquet, S, Brooks, D, Burke, DL, Rosell, A Carnero, Kind, M Carrasco, Carretero, J, Castander, FJ, Choi, A, Costanzi, M, Crocce, M, da Costa, LN, Pereira, MES, Dietrich, JP, Everett, S, Ferrero, I, Frieman, J, García-Bellido, J, Gatti, M, Gaztanaga, E, Gerdes, DW, Gruen, D, Gruendl, RA, Gschwend, J, Gutierrez, G, Hinton, SR, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, James, DJ, Kuehn, K, Kuropatkin, N, Lima, M, March, M, Melchior, P, Menanteau, F, Miquel, R, Morgan, R, Palmese, A, Paz-Chinchón, F, Pieres, A, Malagón, AA Plazas, Porredon, A, Sanchez, E, Scarpine, V, Schubnell, M, Serrano, S, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Smith, M, Suchyta, E, Swanson, MEC, Tarle, G, Thomas, D, To, C, Varga, TN, and Weller, J
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Space Sciences ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,methods: statistical ,cosmological parameters ,cosmology: observations ,large-scale structure of the Universe ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
Recent cosmological analyses rely on the ability to accurately sample from high-dimensional posterior distributions. A variety of algorithms have been applied in the field, but justification of the particular sampler choice and settings is often lacking. Here, we investigate three such samplers to motivate and validate the algorithm and settings used for the Dark Energy Survey (DES) analyses of the first 3 yr (Y3) of data from combined measurements of weak lensing and galaxy clustering. We employ the full DES Year 1 likelihood alongside a much faster approximate likelihood, which enables us to assess the outcomes from each sampler choice and demonstrate the robustness of our full results. We find that the ellipsoidal nested sampling algorithm MULTINEST reports inconsistent estimates of the Bayesian evidence and somewhat narrower parameter credible intervals than the sliced nested sampling implemented in POLYCHORD. We compare the findings from MULTINEST and POLYCHORD with parameter inference from the Metropolis–Hastings algorithm, finding good agreement. We determine that POLYCHORD provides a good balance of speed and robustness for posterior and evidence estimation, and recommend different settings for testing purposes and final chains for analyses with DES Y3 data. Our methodology can readily be reproduced to obtain suitable sampler settings for future surveys.
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- 2023
16. Surveys of the Cosmic X-ray Background
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Brandt, W. N., Yang, G., Bambi, Cosimo, editor, and Santangelo, Andrea, editor
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- 2024
- Full Text
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17. Scaling Relations of Clusters and Groups and Their Evolution
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Lovisari, Lorenzo, Maughan, Ben J., Bambi, Cosimo, editor, and Santangelo, Andrea, editor
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. The Dawn of Black Holes
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Lusso, Elisabeta, Valiante, Rosa, Vito, Fabio, Bambi, Cosimo, editor, and Santangelo, Andrea, editor
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Concerning colour: The effect of environment on type Ia supernova colour in the dark energy survey
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Kelsey, L, Sullivan, M, Wiseman, P, Armstrong, P, Chen, R, Brout, D, Davis, TM, Dixon, M, Frohmaier, C, Galbany, L, Graur, O, Kessler, R, Lidman, C, Möller, A, Popovic, B, Rose, B, Scolnic, D, Smith, M, Vincenzi, M, Abbott, TMC, Aguena, M, Allam, S, Alves, O, Annis, J, Bacon, D, Bertin, E, Bocquet, S, Brooks, D, Burke, DL, Rosell, A Carnero, Kind, M Carrasco, Carretero, J, Costanzi, M, da Costa, LN, Pereira, MES, Desai, S, Diehl, HT, Everett, S, Ferrero, I, Frieman, J, García-Bellido, J, Gruen, D, Gruendl, RA, Gschwend, J, Gutierrez, G, Hinton, SR, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, James, DJ, Kuehn, K, Kuropatkin, N, Lewis, GF, Mena-Fernández, J, Miquel, R, Palmese, A, Paz-Chinchón, F, Pieres, A, Malagón, AA Plazas, Raveri, M, Rodriguez-Monroy, M, Romer, AK, Sanchez, E, Scarpine, V, Schubnell, M, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Suchyta, E, Swanson, MEC, Tarle, G, Tucker, DL, Weaverdyck, N, and Collaboration, DES
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Space Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,surveys ,supernovae: general ,distance scale ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
ABSTRACT: Recent analyses have found intriguing correlations between the colour (c) of type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) and the size of their ‘mass-step’, the relationship between SN Ia host galaxy stellar mass (Mstellar) and SN Ia Hubble residual, and suggest that the cause of this relationship is dust. Using 675 photometrically classified SNe Ia from the Dark Energy Survey 5-yr sample, we study the differences in Hubble residual for a variety of global host galaxy and local environmental properties for SN Ia subsamples split by their colour. We find a 3σ difference in the mass-step when comparing blue (c < 0) and red (c > 0) SNe. We observe the lowest r.m.s. scatter (∼0.14 mag) in the Hubble residual for blue SNe in low mass/blue environments, suggesting that this is the most homogeneous sample for cosmological analyses. By fitting for c-dependent relationships between Hubble residuals and Mstellar, approximating existing dust models, we remove the mass-step from the data and find tentative ∼2σ residual steps in rest-frame galaxy U − R colour. This indicates that dust modelling based on Mstellar may not fully explain the remaining dispersion in SN Ia luminosity. Instead, accounting for a c-dependent relationship between Hubble residuals and global U − R, results in ≤1σ residual steps in Mstellar and local U − R, suggesting that U − R provides different information about the environment of SNe Ia compared to Mstellar, and motivating the inclusion of galaxy U − R colour in SN Ia distance bias correction.
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- 2022
20. FOUR FUNDAMENTAL FOREGROUND POWER SPECTRUM SHAPES FOR 21 cm COSMOLOGY OBSERVATIONS
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Beardsley, Adam [Department of Physics, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195 (United States)]
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- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The Dark Energy Survey Supernova Program results: type Ia supernova brightness correlates with host galaxy dust
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Meldorf, C, Palmese, A, Brout, D, Chen, R, Scolnic, D, Kelsey, L, Galbany, L, Hartley, WG, Davis, TM, Drlica-Wagner, A, Vincenzi, M, Annis, J, Dixon, M, Graur, O, Lidman, C, Möller, A, Nugent, P, Rose, B, Smith, M, Allam, S, Tucker, DL, Asorey, J, Calcino, J, Carollo, D, Glazebrook, K, Lewis, GF, Taylor, G, Tucker, BE, Kim, AG, Diehl, HT, Aguena, M, Andrade-Oliveira, F, Bacon, D, Bertin, E, Bocquet, S, Brooks, D, Burke, DL, Carretero, J, Kind, M Carrasco, Castander, FJ, Costanzi, M, da Costa, LN, Desai, S, Doel, P, Everett, S, Ferrero, I, Friedel, D, Frieman, J, García-Bellido, J, Gatti, M, Gruen, D, Gschwend, J, Gutierrez, G, Hinton, SR, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, James, DJ, Kuehn, K, March, M, Marshall, JL, Menanteau, F, Miquel, R, Morgan, R, Paz-Chinchón, F, Pereira, MES, Malagón, AA Plazas, Sanchez, E, Scarpine, V, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Suchyta, E, Tarle, G, Varga, TN, and Collaboration, DES
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Space Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Affordable and Clean Energy ,surveys ,supernovae: general ,galaxies: general ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
Cosmological analyses with type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) often assume a single empirical relation between colour and luminosity (β) and do not account for varying host-galaxy dust properties. However, from studies of dust in large samples of galaxies, it is known that dust attenuation can vary significantly. Here, we take advantage of state-of-the-art modelling of galaxy properties to characterize dust parameters (dust attenuation AV, and a parameter describing the dust law slope RV) for 1100 Dark Energy Survey (DES) SN host galaxies. Utilizing optical and infrared data of the hosts alone, we find three key aspects of host dust that impact SN cosmology: (1) there exists a large range (∼1-6) of host RV; (2) high-stellar mass hosts have RV on average ∼0.7 lower than that of low-mass hosts; (3) for a subsample of 81 spectroscopically classified SNe there is a significant (>3σ) correlation between the Hubble diagram residuals of red SNe Ia and the host RV that when corrected for reduces scatter by ∼ 13 per cent and the significance of the 'mass step' to ∼1σ. These represent independent confirmations of recent predictions based on dust that attempted to explain the puzzling 'mass step' and intrinsic scatter (σint) in SN Ia analyses.
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- 2022
22. Consistent lensing and clustering in a low-S8 Universe with BOSS, DES Year 3, HSC Year 1, and KiDS-1000
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Amon, A, Robertson, NC, Miyatake, H, Heymans, C, White, M, DeRose, J, Yuan, S, Wechsler, RH, Varga, TN, Bocquet, S, Dvornik, A, More, S, Ross, AJ, Hoekstra, H, Alarcon, A, Asgari, M, Blazek, J, Campos, A, Chen, R, Choi, A, Crocce, M, Diehl, HT, Doux, C, Eckert, K, Elvin-Poole, J, Everett, S, Ferté, A, Gatti, M, Giannini, G, Gruen, D, Gruendl, RA, Hartley, WG, Herner, K, Hildebrandt, H, Huang, S, Huff, EM, Joachimi, B, Lee, S, MacCrann, N, Myles, J, Navarro-Alsina, A, Nishimichi, T, Prat, J, Secco, LF, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Sheldon, E, Shin, T, Tröster, T, Troxel, MA, Tutusaus, I, Wright, AH, Yin, B, Aguena, M, Allam, S, Annis, J, Bacon, D, Bilicki, M, Brooks, D, Burke, DL, Rosell, A Carnero, Carretero, J, Castander, FJ, Cawthon, R, Costanzi, M, da Costa, LN, Pereira, MES, de Jong, J, De Vicente, J, Desai, S, Dietrich, JP, Doel, P, Ferrero, I, Frieman, J, García-Bellido, J, Gerdes, DW, Gschwend, J, Gutierrez, G, Hinton, SR, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, Huterer, D, Kannawadi, A, Kuehn, K, Kuropatkin, N, Lahav, O, Lima, M, Maia, MAG, Marshall, JL, Menanteau, F, Miquel, R, Mohr, JJ, Morgan, R, Muir, J, Paz-Chinchón, F, Pieres, A, Malagón, AA Plazas, Porredon, A, Rodriguez-Monroy, M, Roodman, A, and Sanchez, E
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Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,gravitational lensing: weak ,large-scale structure of Universe ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
We evaluate the consistency between lensing and clustering based on measurements from Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey combined with galaxy-galaxy lensing from Dark Energy Survey (DES) Year 3, Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program (HSC) Year 1, and Kilo-Degree Survey (KiDS)-1000. We find good agreement between these lensing data sets. We model the observations using the Dark Emulator and fit the data at two fixed cosmologies: Planck (S8 = 0.83), and a Lensing cosmology (S8 = 0.76). For a joint analysis limited to large scales, we find that both cosmologies provide an acceptable fit to the data. Full utilization of the higher signal-to-noise small-scale measurements is hindered by uncertainty in the impact of baryon feedback and assembly bias, which we account for with a reasoned theoretical error budget. We incorporate a systematic inconsistency parameter for each redshift bin, A, that decouples the lensing and clustering. With a wide range of scales, we find different results for the consistency between the two cosmologies. Limiting the analysis to the bins for which the impact of the lens sample selection is expected to be minimal, for the Lensing cosmology, the measurements are consistent with A = 1; A = 0.91 ± 0.04 (A = 0.97 ± 0.06) using DES+KiDS (HSC). For the Planck case, we find a discrepancy: A = 0.79 ± 0.03 (A = 0.84 ± 0.05) using DES+KiDS (HSC). We demonstrate that a kinematic Sunyaev-Zeldovich-based estimate for baryonic effects alleviates some of the discrepancy in the Planck cosmology. This analysis demonstrates the statistical power of small-scale measurements; however, caution is still warranted given modelling uncertainties and foreground sample selection effects.
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- 2022
23. The outer stellar mass of massive galaxies: a simple tracer of halo mass with scatter comparable to richness and reduced projection effects
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Huang, Song, Leauthaud, Alexie, Bradshaw, Christopher, Hearin, Andrew, Behroozi, Peter, Lange, Johannes, Greene, Jenny, DeRose, Joseph, Speagle, Joshua S, and Xhakaj, Enia
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Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Life Below Water ,gravitational lensing: weak ,galaxies: clusters: general ,galaxies: haloes ,galaxies: structure ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
Using the weak gravitational lensing data from the Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program (HSC survey), we study the potential of different stellar mass estimates in tracing halo mass. We consider galaxies with log10(M∗/M⊙) > 11.5 at 0.2 < z < 0.5 with carefully measured light profiles, and clusters from the redMaPPer and CAMIRA richness-based algorithms. We devise a method (the 'Top-N test') to evaluate the scatter in the halo mass-observable relation for different tracers, and to inter-compare halo mass proxies in four number density bins using stacked galaxy-galaxy lensing profiles. This test reveals three key findings. Stellar masses based on CModel photometry and aperture luminosity within R
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- 2022
24. Workshop III — Cosmology: Observations versus theories
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Seshadri, T R
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- 2000
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Dark Energy Survey Year 3 results: calibration of lens sample redshift distributions using clustering redshifts with BOSS/eBOSS
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Cawthon, R, Elvin-Poole, J, Porredon, A, Crocce, M, Giannini, G, Gatti, M, Ross, AJ, Rykoff, ES, Rosell, A Carnero, DeRose, J, Lee, S, Rodriguez-Monroy, M, Amon, A, Bechtol, K, De Vicente, J, Gruen, D, Morgan, R, Sanchez, E, Sanchez, J, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Abbott, TMC, Aguena, M, Allam, S, Annis, J, Avila, S, Bacon, D, Bertin, E, Brooks, D, Burke, DL, Kind, M Carrasco, Carretero, J, Castander, FJ, Choi, A, Costanzi, M, da Costa, LN, Pereira, MES, Dawson, K, Desai, S, Diehl, HT, Eckert, K, Everett, S, Ferrero, I, Fosalba, P, Frieman, J, García-Bellido, J, Gaztanaga, E, Gruendl, RA, Gschwend, J, Gutierrez, G, Hinton, SR, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, Huterer, D, James, DJ, Kim, AG, Kneib, J-P, Kuehn, K, Kuropatkin, N, Lahav, O, Lima, M, Lin, H, Maia, MAG, Melchior, P, Menanteau, F, Miquel, R, Mohr, JJ, Muir, J, Myles, J, Palmese, A, Pandey, S, Paz-Chinchón, F, Percival, WJ, Plazas, AA, Roodman, A, Rossi, G, Scarpine, V, Serrano, S, Smith, M, Soares-Santos, M, Suchyta, E, Swanson, MEC, Tarle, G, To, C, Troxel, MA, and Wilkinson, RD
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Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,surveys ,galaxies: distances and redshifts ,large-scale structure of Universe ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
We present clustering redshift measurements for Dark Energy Survey (DES) lens sample galaxies used in weak gravitational lensing and galaxy clustering studies. To perform these measurements, we cross-correlate with spectroscopic galaxies from the Baryon Acoustic Oscillation Survey (BOSS) and its extension, eBOSS. We validate our methodology in simulations, including a new technique to calibrate systematic errors that result from the galaxy clustering bias, and we find that our method is generally unbiased in calibrating the mean redshift. We apply our method to the data, and estimate the redshift distribution for 11 different photometrically selected bins. We find general agreement between clustering redshift and photometric redshift estimates, with differences on the inferred mean redshift found to be below |Δz| = 0.01 in most of the bins. We also test a method to calibrate a width parameter for redshift distributions, which we found necessary to use for some of our samples. Our typical uncertainties on the mean redshift ranged from 0.003 to 0.008, while our uncertainties on the width ranged from 4 to 9 per cent. We discuss how these results calibrate the photometric redshift distributions used in companion papers for DES Year 3 results.
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- 2022
26. Third data release of the Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program
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Aihara, Hiroaki, AlSayyad, Yusra, Ando, Makoto, Armstrong, Robert, Bosch, James, Egami, Eiichi, Furusawa, Hisanori, Furusawa, Junko, Harasawa, Sumiko, Harikane, Yuichi, Hsieh, Bau-Ching, Ikeda, Hiroyuki, Ito, Kei, Iwata, Ikuru, Kodama, Tadayuki, Koike, Michitaro, Kokubo, Mitsuru, Komiyama, Yutaka, Li, Xiangchong, Liang, Yongming, Lin, Yen-Ting, Lupton, Robert H, Lust, Nate B, MacArthur, Lauren A, Mawatari, Ken, Mineo, Sogo, Miyatake, Hironao, Miyazaki, Satoshi, More, Surhud, Morishima, Takahiro, Murayama, Hitoshi, Nakajima, Kimihiko, Nakata, Fumiaki, Nishizawa, Atsushi J, Oguri, Masamune, Okabe, Nobuhiro, Okura, Yuki, Ono, Yoshiaki, Osato, Ken, Ouchi, Masami, Pan, Yen-Chen, Plazas Malagón, Andrés A, Price, Paul A, Reed, Sophie L, Rykoff, Eli S, Shibuya, Takatoshi, Simunovic, Mirko, Strauss, Michael A, Sugimori, Kanako, Suto, Yasushi, Suzuki, Nao, Takada, Masahiro, Takagi, Yuhei, Takata, Tadafumi, Takita, Satoshi, Tanaka, Masayuki, Tang, Shenli, Taranu, Dan S, Terai, Tsuyoshi, Toba, Yoshiki, Turner, Edwin L, Uchiyama, Hisakazu, Vijarnwannaluk, Bovornpratch, Waters, Christopher Z, Yamada, Yoshihiko, Yamamoto, Naoaki, and Yamashita, Takuji
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astronomical databases: miscellaneous ,cosmology: observations ,galaxies: general ,surveys ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
This paper presents the third data release of the Hyper Suprime-Cam Subaru Strategic Program (HSC-SSP), a wide-field multi-band imaging survey with the Subaru 8.2 m telescope. HSC-SSP has three survey layers (Wide, Deep, and UltraDeep) with different area coverages and depths, designed to address a wide array of astrophysical questions. This third release from HSC-SSP includes data from 278 nights of observing time and covers about 670 deg2 in all five broad-band filters (grizy) at the full depth (∼26 mag at 5σ depending on filter) in the Wide layer. If we include partially observed areas, the release covers 1470 deg2. The Deep and UltraDeep layers have ∼ 80% of the originally planned integration times, and are considered done, as we have slightly changed the observing strategy in order to compensate for various time losses. There are a number of updates in the image processing pipeline. Of particular importance is the change in the sky subtraction algorithm; we subtract the sky on small scales before the detection and measurement stages, which has significantly reduced the number of false detections. Thanks to this and other updates, the overall quality of the processed data has improved since the previous release. However, there are limitations in the data (for example, the pipeline is not optimized for crowded fields), and we encourage the user to check the quality assurance plots as well as a list of known issues before exploiting the data.
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- 2022
27. An Analysis of Variance of the Pantheon+ Dataset: Systematics in the Covariance Matrix?
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Ryan E. Keeley, Arman Shafieloo, and Benjamin L’Huillier
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cosmology: observations ,distance scale ,supernovae methods: statistical ,Elementary particle physics ,QC793-793.5 - Abstract
We investigate the statistics of the available Pantheon+ dataset. Noticing that the χ2 value for the best-fit ΛCDM model to the real data is small, we quantify how significant its smallness is by calculating the distribution of χ2 values for the best-fit ΛCDM model fit to mock Pantheon+-like datasets, using the provided covariance matrix. We further investigate the distribution of the residuals of the Pantheon+ dataset with respect to the best-fit ΛCDM model, and notice that they scatter less than would be expected from the covariance matrix but find no significant kurtosis. These results point to the conclusion that the Pantheon+ covariance matrix is over-estimated. One simple interpretation of these results is a ∼7% overestimation of errors on SN distance moduli in Pantheon+ data. When the covariance matrix is reduced by subtracting an intrinsic scatter term from the diagonal terms of the covariance matrix, the best-fit χ2 for the ΛCDM model achieves a normal value of 1580 and no deviation from ΛCDM is detected. We further quantify how consistent the ΛCDM model is with respect to the modified data with the subtracted covariance matrix using model-independent reconstruction techniques such as the iterative smoothing method. We find that the standard model is consistent with the data. There are a number of potential explanations for this smallness of the χ2, such as a Malmquist bias at high redshift, or accounting for systematic uncertainties by adding them to the covariance matrix, thus approximating systematic uncertainties as statistical ones.
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Dark Energy Survey Year 3 results: galaxy clustering and systematics treatment for lens galaxy samples
- Author
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Rodríguez-Monroy, M, Weaverdyck, N, Elvin-Poole, J, Crocce, M, Rosell, A Carnero, Andrade-Oliveira, F, Avila, S, Bechtol, K, Bernstein, GM, Blazek, J, Camacho, H, Cawthon, R, De Vicente, J, DeRose, J, Dodelson, S, Everett, S, Fang, X, Ferrero, I, Ferté, A, Friedrich, O, Gaztanaga, E, Giannini, G, Gruendl, RA, Hartley, WG, Herner, K, Huff, EM, Jarvis, M, Krause, E, MacCrann, N, Mena-Fernández, J, Muir, J, Pandey, S, Park, Y, Porredon, A, Prat, J, Rosenfeld, R, Ross, AJ, Rozo, E, Rykoff, ES, Sanchez, E, Cid, D Sanchez, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Tabbutt, M, To, C, Wagoner, EL, Wechsler, RH, Aguena, M, Allam, S, Amon, A, Annis, J, Bacon, D, Baxter, E, Bertin, E, Bhargava, S, Brooks, D, Burke, DL, Kind, M Carrasco, Carretero, J, Castander, FJ, Choi, A, Conselice, C, Costanzi, M, da Costa, LN, Pereira, MES, Desai, S, Diehl, HT, Flaugher, B, Fosalba, P, Frieman, J, García-Bellido, J, Giannantonio, T, Gruen, D, Gschwend, J, Gutierrez, G, Hinton, SR, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, Huterer, D, Jain, B, James, DJ, Kuehn, K, Kuropatkin, N, Lima, M, Maia, MAG, March, M, Marshall, JL, Melchior, P, Menanteau, F, Miller, CJ, Miquel, R, Mohr, JJ, Morgan, R, Palmese, A, Paz-Chinchón, F, Pieres, A, Malagón, AA Plazas, Roodman, A, Scarpine, V, Serrano, S, and Smith, M
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Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Physical Sciences ,cosmological parameters ,cosmology: observations ,dark energy ,large-scale structure of the Universe ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
In this work, we present the galaxy clustering measurements of the two DES lens galaxy samples: a magnitude-limited sample optimized for the measurement of cosmological parameters, maglim, and a sample of luminous red galaxies selected with the redmagic algorithm. maglim/redmagic sample contains over 10 million/2.5 million galaxies and is divided into six/five photometric redshift bins spanning the range z [0.20, 1.05]/z [0.15, 0.90]. Both samples cover 4143 °2 over which we perform our analysis blind, measuring the angular correlation function with an S/N ∼63 for both samples. In a companion paper, these measurements of galaxy clustering are combined with the correlation functions of cosmic shear and galaxy-galaxy lensing of each sample to place cosmological constraints with a 3 × 2pt analysis. We conduct a thorough study of the mitigation of systematic effects caused by the spatially varying survey properties and we correct the measurements to remove artificial clustering signals. We employ several decontamination methods with different configurations to ensure the robustness of our corrections and to determine the systematic uncertainty that needs to be considered for the final cosmology analyses. We validate our fiducial methodology using lognormal mocks, showing that our decontamination procedure induces biases no greater than 0.5σ in the (ωm, b) plane, where b is the galaxy bias.
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- 2022
29. Out of one, many: distinguishing time delays from lensed supernovae
- Author
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Denissenya, Mikhail, Bag, Satadru, Kim, Alex G, Linder, Eric V, and Shafieloo, Arman
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gravitational lensing: strong ,transients: supernovae ,cosmology: observations ,methods: numerical ,data analysis ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
Gravitationally lensed Type Ia supernovae are an emerging probe with great potential for constraining dark energy, spatial curvature, and the Hubble constant. The multiple images and their time delayed and magnified fluxes may be unresolved, however, blended into a single light curve. We demonstrate methods without a fixed source template matching for extracting the individual images, determining whether there are one (no lensing) or two or four (lensed) images, and measuring the time delays between them that are valuable cosmological probes. We find 100 per cent success for determining the number of images for time delays greater than ∼10 d.
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- 2022
30. Lensing without borders – I. A blind comparison of the amplitude of galaxy–galaxy lensing between independent imaging surveys
- Author
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Leauthaud, A, Amon, A, Singh, S, Gruen, D, Lange, JU, Huang, S, Robertson, NC, Varga, TN, Luo, Y, Heymans, C, Hildebrandt, H, Blake, C, Aguena, M, Allam, S, Andrade-Oliveira, F, Annis, J, Bertin, E, Bhargava, S, Blazek, J, Bridle, SL, Brooks, D, Burke, DL, Rosell, A Carnero, Kind, M Carrasco, Carretero, J, Castander, FJ, Cawthon, R, Choi, A, Costanzi, M, da Costa, LN, Pereira, MES, Davis, C, De Vicente, J, DeRose, J, Diehl, HT, Dietrich, JP, Doel, P, Eckert, K, Everett, S, Evrard, AE, Ferrero, I, Flaugher, B, Fosalba, P, García-Bellido, J, Gatti, M, Gaztanaga, E, Gruendl, RA, Gschwend, J, Hartley, WG, Hollowood, DL, Honscheid, K, Jain, B, James, DJ, Jarvis, M, Joachimi, B, Kannawadi, A, Kim, AG, Krause, E, Kuehn, K, Kuijken, K, Kuropatkin, N, Lima, M, MacCrann, N, Maia, MAG, Makler, M, March, M, Marshall, JL, Melchior, P, Menanteau, F, Miquel, R, Miyatake, H, Mohr, JJ, Moraes, B, More, S, Surhud, M, Morgan, R, Myles, J, Ogando, RLC, Palmese, A, Paz-Chinchón, F, Malagón, AA Plazas, Prat, J, Rau, MM, Rhodes, J, Rodriguez-Monroy, M, Roodman, A, Ross, AJ, Samuroff, S, Sánchez, C, Sanchez, E, Scarpine, V, Schlegel, DJ, Schubnell, M, Serrano, S, Sevilla-Noarbe, I, Sifón, C, Smith, M, Speagle, JS, Suchyta, E, and Tarle, G
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Space Sciences ,Particle and High Energy Physics ,Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,cosmology: observations ,large-scale structure of Universe ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
Lensing without borders is a cross-survey collaboration created to assess the consistency of galaxy-galaxy lensing signals (Δς) across different data sets and to carry out end-to-end tests of systematic errors. We perform a blind comparison of the amplitude of Δς using lens samples from BOSS and six independent lensing surveys. We find good agreement between empirically estimated and reported systematic errors which agree to better than 2.3σ in four lens bins and three radial ranges. For lenses with zL > 0.43 and considering statistical errors, we detect a 3-4σ correlation between lensing amplitude and survey depth. This correlation could arise from the increasing impact at higher redshift of unrecognized galaxy blends on shear calibration and imperfections in photometric redshift calibration. At zL > 0.54, amplitudes may additionally correlate with foreground stellar density. The amplitude of these trends is within survey-defined systematic error budgets that are designed to include known shear and redshift calibration uncertainty. Using a fully empirical and conservative method, we do not find evidence for large unknown systematics. Systematic errors greater than 15 per cent (25 per cent) ruled out in three lens bins at 68 per cent (95 per cent) confidence at z < 0.54. Differences with respect to predictions based on clustering are observed to be at the 20-30 per cent level. Our results therefore suggest that lensing systematics alone are unlikely to fully explain the 'lensing is low' effect at z < 0.54. This analysis demonstrates the power of cross-survey comparisons and provides a promising path for identifying and reducing systematics in future lensing analyses.
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- 2022
31. Angular clustering properties of the DESI QSO target selection using DR9 Legacy Imaging Surveys
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Chaussidon, Edmond, Yèche, Christophe, Palanque-Delabrouille, Nathalie, de Mattia, Arnaud, Myers, Adam D, Rezaie, Mehdi, Ross, Ashley J, Seo, Hee-Jong, Brooks, David, Gaztañaga, Enrique, Kehoe, Robert, Levi, Michael E, Newman, Jeffrey A, Tarlé, Gregory, and Zhang, Kai
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Nuclear and Plasma Physics ,Physical Sciences ,Bioengineering ,methods: data analysis ,surveys ,large-scale structure of Universe ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
The quasar target selection for the upcoming survey of the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) will be fixed for the next 5 yr. The aim of this work is to validate the quasar selection by studying the impact of imaging systematics as well as stellar and galactic contaminants, and to develop a procedure to mitigate them. Density fluctuations of quasar targets are found to be related to photometric properties such as seeing and depth of the Data Release 9 of the DESI Legacy Imaging Surveys. To model this complex relation, we explore machine learning algorithms (random forest and multilayer perceptron) as an alternative to the standard linear regression. Splitting the footprint of the Legacy Imaging Surveys into three regions according to photometric properties, we perform an independent analysis in each region, validating our method using extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (eBOSS) EZ-mocks. The mitigation procedure is tested by comparing the angular correlation of the corrected target selection on each photometric region to the angular correlation function obtained using quasars from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release 16. With our procedure, we recover a similar level of correlation between DESI quasar targets and SDSS quasars in two-thirds of the total footprint and we show that the excess of correlation in the remaining area is due to a stellar contamination that should be removed with DESI spectroscopic data. We derive the Limber parameters in our three imaging regions and compare them to previous measurements from SDSS and the 2dF QSO Redshift Survey.
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- 2021
32. Preliminary clustering properties of the DESI BGS bright targets using DR9 Legacy Imaging Surveys
- Author
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Zarrouk, Pauline, Ruiz-Macias, Omar, Cole, Shaun, Norberg, Peder, Baugh, Carlton, Brooks, David, Gaztañaga, Enrique, Kitanidis, Ellie, Kehoe, Robert, Landriau, Martin, Moustakas, John, Prada, Francisco, and Tarlé, Gregory
- Subjects
Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,astronomical data bases: miscellaneous ,large-scale structure of Universe ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
We characterize the selection cuts and clustering properties of a magnitude-limited sample of bright galaxies that is part of the Bright Galaxy Survey (BGS) of the Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) using the ninth data release of the Legacy Imaging Surveys (DR9). We describe changes in the DR9 selection compared to the DR8 one and we also compare the DR9 selection in three distinct regions: BASS/MzLS in the north Galactic Cap (NGC), DECaLS in the NGC, and DECaLS in the south Galactic Cap (SGC). We investigate the systematics associated with the selection and assess its completeness by matching the BGS targets with the Galaxy and Mass Assembly (GAMA) survey. We measure the angular clustering for the overall bright sample (rmag ≤ 19.5) and as function of apparent magnitude and colour. This enables to deteine the clustering strength r0 and slope γby fitting a power-law model that can be used to generate accurate mock catalogues for this tracer. We use a counts-in-cells technique to explore higher order statistics and cross-correlations with external spectroscopic data sets in order to check the evolution of the clustering with redshift and the redshift distribution of the BGS targets using clustering redshifts. While this work validates the properties of the BGS bright targets, the final target selection pipeline and clustering properties of the entire DESI BGS will be fully characterized and validated with the spectroscopic data of Survey Validation.
- Published
- 2021
33. Optimizing a magnitude-limited spectroscopic training sample for photometric classification of supernovae
- Author
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Carrick, Jonathan E, Hook, Isobel M, Swann, Elizabeth, Boone, Kyle, Frohmaier, Chris, Kim, Alex G, and Sullivan, Mark
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methods: data analysis ,supernovae: general ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
In preparation for photometric classification of transients from the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) we run tests with different training data sets. Using estimates of the depth to which the 4-m Multi-Object Spectroscopic Telescope (4MOST) Time Domain Extragalactic Survey (TiDES) can classify transients, we simulate a magnitude-limited sample reaching rAB ≈ 22.5 mag. We run our simulations with the software SNMACHINE, a photometric classification pipeline using machine learning. The machine-learning algorithms struggle to classify supernovae when the training sample is magnitude limited, in contrast to representative training samples. Classification performance noticeably improves when we combine the magnitude-limited training sample with a simulated realistic sample of faint high-redshift supernovae observed from larger spectroscopic facilities; the algorithms’ range of average area under receiver operator characteristic curve (AUC) scores over 10 runs increases from 0.547–0.628 to 0.946–0.969 and purity of the classified sample reaches 95 per cent in all runs for two of the four algorithms. By creating new, artificial light curves using the augmentation software AVOCADO, we achieve a purity in our classified sample of 95 per cent in all 10 runs performed for all machine-learning algorithms considered. We also reach a highest average AUC score of 0.986 with the artificial neural network algorithm. Having ‘true’ faint supernovae to complement our magnitude-limited sample is a crucial requirement in optimization of a 4MOST spectroscopic sample. However, our results are a proof of concept that augmentation is also necessary to achieve the best classification results.
- Published
- 2021
34. The mass and galaxy distribution around SZ-selected clusters
- Author
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Shin, T, Jain, B, Adhikari, S, Baxter, EJ, Chang, C, Pandey, S, Salcedo, A, Weinberg, DH, Amsellem, A, Battaglia, N, Belyakov, M, Dacunha, T, Goldstein, S, Kravtsov, AV, Varga, TN, Abbott, TMC, Aguena, M, Alarcon, A, Allam, S, Amon, A, Andrade-Oliveira, F, Annis, J, Bacon, D, Bechtol, K, Becker, MR, Bernstein, GM, Bertin, E, Bocquet, S, Bond, JR, Brooks, D, Buckley-Geer, E, Burke, DL, Campos, A, Rosell, A Carnero, Kind, M Carrasco, Carretero, J, Chen, R, Choi, A, Costanzi, M, da Costa, LN, DeRose, J, Desai, S, De Vicente, J, Devlin, MJ, Diehl, HT, Dietrich, JP, Dodelson, S, Doel, P, Doux, C, Drlica-Wagner, A, Eckert, K, Elvin-Poole, J, Everett, S, Ferraro, S, Ferrero, I, Ferté, A, Flaugher, B, Frieman, J, Gallardo, PA, Gatti, M, Gaztanaga, E, Gerdes, DW, Gruen, D, Gruendl, RA, Gutierrez, G, Harrison, I, Hartley, WG, Hill, JC, Hilton, M, Hinton, SR, Hollowood, DL, Hughes, JP, James, DJ, Jarvis, M, Jeltema, T, Koopman, BJ, Krause, E, Kuehn, K, Kuropatkin, N, Lahav, O, Lima, M, Lokken, M, MacCrann, N, Madhavacheril, MS, Maia, MAG, McCullough, J, McMahon, J, Melchior, P, Menanteau, F, Miquel, R, Mohr, JJ, Moodley, K, Morgan, R, Myles, J, Nati, F, Navarro-Alsina, A, Niemack, MD, Ogando, RLC, Page, LA, and Palmese, A
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galaxies: clusters: general ,galaxies: evolution ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We present measurements of the radial profiles of the mass and galaxy number density around Sunyaev–Zel’dovich (SZ)-selected clusters using both weak lensing and galaxy counts. The clusters are selected from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope Data Release 5 and the galaxies from the Dark Energy Survey Year 3 data set. With signal-to-noise ratio of 62 (45) for galaxy (weak lensing) profiles over scales of about 0.2–20 h-1 Mpc, these are the highest precision measurements for SZ-selected clusters to date. Because SZ selection closely approximates mass selection, these measurements enable several tests of theoretical models of the mass and light distribution around clusters. Our main findings are: (1) The splashback feature is detected at a consistent location in both the mass and galaxy profiles and its location is consistent with predictions of cold dark matter N-body simulations. (2) The full mass profile is also consistent with the simulations. (3) The shapes of the galaxy and lensing profiles are remarkably similar for our sample over the entire range of scales, from well inside the cluster halo to the quasilinear regime. We measure the dependence of the profile shapes on the galaxy sample, redshift, and cluster mass. We extend the Diemer & Kravtsov model for the cluster profiles to the linear regime using perturbation theory and show that it provides a good match to the measured profiles. We also compare the measured profiles to predictions of the standard halo model and simulations that include hydrodynamics. Applications of these results to cluster mass estimation, cosmology, and astrophysics are discussed.
- Published
- 2021
35. Correcting correlation functions for redshift-dependent interloper contamination
- Author
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Farrow, Daniel J, Sánchez, Ariel G, Ciardullo, Robin, Cooper, Erin Mentuch, Davis, Dustin, Fabricius, Maximilian, Gawiser, Eric, Gebhardt, Henry S Grasshorn, Gebhardt, Karl, Hill, Gary J, Jeong, Donghui, Komatsu, Eiichiro, Landriau, Martin, Liu, Chenxu, Saito, Shun, Snigula, Jan, and Wold, Isak GB
- Subjects
Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,methods: data analysis ,cosmology: observations ,large-scale structure of the Universe ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
The construction of catalogues of a particular type of galaxy can be complicated by interlopers contaminating the sample. In spectroscopic galaxy surveys this can be due to the misclassification of an emission line; for example in the Hobby-Eberly Telescope Dark Energy Experiment (HETDEX) low-redshift [O ii] emitters may make up a few per cent of the observed Ly α emitter (LAE) sample. The presence of contaminants affects the measured correlation functions and power spectra. Previous attempts to deal with this using the cross-correlation function have assumed sources at a fixed redshift, or not modelled evolution within the adopted redshift bins. However, in spectroscopic surveys like HETDEX, where the contamination fraction is likely to be redshift dependent, the observed clustering of misclassified sources will appear to evolve strongly due to projection effects, even if their true clustering does not. We present a practical method for accounting for the presence of contaminants with redshift-dependent contamination fractions and projected clustering. We show using mock catalogues that our method, unlike existing approaches, yields unbiased clustering measurements from the upcoming HETDEX survey in scenarios with redshift-dependent contamination fractions within the redshift bins used. We show our method returns autocorrelation functions with systematic biases much smaller than the statistical noise for samples with at least as high as 7 per cent contamination. We also present and test a method for fitting for the redshift-dependent interloper fraction using the LAE-[O ii] galaxy cross-correlation function, which gives less biased results than assuming a single interloper fraction for the whole sample.
- Published
- 2021
36. The GOGREEN survey: Internal dynamics of clusters of galaxies at redshift 0.9–1.4
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Biviano, A, van der Burg, RFJ, Balogh, ML, Munari, E, Cooper, MC, De Lucia, G, Demarco, R, Jablonka, P, Muzzin, A, Nantais, J, Old, LJ, Rudnick, G, Vulcani, B, Wilson, G, Yee, HKC, Zaritsky, D, Cerulo, P, Chan, J, Finoguenov, A, Gilbank, D, Lidman, C, Pintos-Castro, I, and Shipley, H
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Particle and High Energy Physics ,Physical Sciences ,galaxies: clusters: general ,cosmology: observations ,galaxies: evolution ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
Context. The study of galaxy cluster mass profiles (M(r)) provides constraints on the nature of dark matter and on physical processes affecting the mass distribution. The study of galaxy cluster velocity anisotropy profiles (β(r)) informs the orbits of galaxies in clusters, which are related to their evolution. The combination of mass profiles and velocity anisotropy profiles allows us to determine the pseudo phase-space density profiles (Q(r)); numerical simulations predict that these profiles follow a simple power law in cluster-centric distance. Aims. We determine the mass, velocity anisotropy, and pseudo phase-space density profiles of clusters of galaxies at the highest redshifts investigated in detail to date. Methods. We exploited the combination of the GOGREEN and GCLASS spectroscopic data-sets for 14 clusters with mass M200 ≥ 1014 M⊙ at redshifts 0.9 ≤ z ≤ 1.4. We constructed an ensemble cluster by stacking 581 spectroscopically identified cluster members with stellar mass M∗ ≥ 109.5 M⊙. We used the MAMPOSSt method to constrain several M(r) and β(r) models, and we then inverted the Jeans equation to determine the ensemble cluster β(r) in a non-parametric way. Finally, we combined the results of the M(r) and β(r) analysis to determine Q(r) for the ensemble cluster. Results. The concentration c200 of the ensemble cluster mass profile is in excellent agreement with predictions from Λ cold dark matter (ΛCDM) cosmological numerical simulations, and with previous determinations for clusters of similar mass and at similar redshifts, obtained from gravitational lensing and X-ray data. We see no significant difference between the total mass density and either the galaxy number density distributions or the stellar mass distribution. Star-forming galaxies are spatially significantly less concentrated than quiescent galaxies. The orbits of cluster galaxies are isotropic near the center and more radial outside. Star-forming galaxies and galaxies of low stellar mass tend to move on more radially elongated orbits than quiescent galaxies and galaxies of high stellar mass. The profile Q(r), determined using either the total mass or the number density profile, is very close to the power-law behavior predicted by numerical simulations. Conclusions. The internal dynamics of clusters at the highest redshift probed in detail to date are very similar to those of lower-redshift clusters, and in excellent agreement with predictions of numerical simulations. The clusters in our sample have already reached a high degree of dynamical relaxation.
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- 2021
37. Redshift evolution of the underlying type Ia supernova stretch distribution
- Author
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Nicolas, N, Rigault, M, Copin, Y, Graziani, R, Aldering, G, Briday, M, Kim, Y-L, Nordin, J, Perlmutter, S, and Smith, M
- Subjects
Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,cosmology: observations ,supernovae: general ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
The detailed nature of type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) remains uncertain, and as survey statistics increase, the question of astrophysical systematic uncertainties arises, notably that of the evolution of SN Ia populations. We study the dependence on redshift of the SN Ia SALT2.4 light-curve stretch, which is a purely intrinsic SN property, to probe its potential redshift drift. The SN stretch has been shown to be strongly correlated with the SN environment, notably with stellar age tracers. We modeled the underlying stretch distribution as a function of redshift, using the evolution of the fraction of young and old SNe Ia as predicted using the SNfactory dataset, and assuming a constant underlying stretch distribution for each age population consisting of Gaussian mixtures. We tested our prediction against published samples that were cut to have marginal magnitude selection effects, so that any observed change is indeed astrophysical and not observational in origin. In this first study, there are indications that the underlying SN Ia stretch distribution evolves as a function of redshift, and that the age drifting model is a better description of the data than any time-constant model, including the sample-based asymmetric distributions that are often used to correct Malmquist bias at a significance higher than 5σ. The favored underlying stretch model is a bimodal one, composed of a high-stretch mode shared by both young and old environments, and a low-stretch mode that is exclusive to old environments. The precise effect of the redshift evolution of the intrinsic properties of a SN Ia population on cosmology remains to be studied. The astrophysical drift of the SN stretch distribution does affect current Malmquist bias corrections, however, and thereby the distances that are derived based on SN that are affected by observational selection effects. We highlight that this bias will increase with surveys covering increasingly larger redshift ranges, which is particularly important for the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope.
- Published
- 2021
38. Baryon acoustic oscillations in the projected cross-correlation function between the eBOSS DR16 quasars and photometric galaxies from the DESI legacy imaging surveys
- Author
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Zarrouk, P, Rezaie, M, Raichoor, A, Ross, AJ, Alam, S, Blum, R, Brookes, D, Chuang, CH, Cole, S, Dawson, KS, Eisenstein, DJ, Kehoe, R, Landriau, M, Moustakas, J, Myers, AD, Norberg, P, Percival, WJ, Prada, F, Schubnell, M, Seo, HJ, Tarlé, G, and Zhao, C
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cosmology: observations ,dark energy ,distance scale ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We search for the baryon acoustic oscillations in the projected cross-correlation function binned into transverse comoving radius between the SDSS-IV DR16 eBOSS quasars and a dense photometric sample of galaxies selected from the DESI Legacy Imaging Surveys. We estimate the density of the photometric sample of galaxies in this redshift range to be about 2900 deg−2, which is deeper than the official DESI emission line galaxy selection, and the density of the spectroscopic sample is about 20 deg−2. In order to mitigate the systematics related to the use of different imaging surveys close to the detection limit, we use a neural network approach that accounts for complex dependences between the imaging attributes and the observed galaxy density. We find that we are limited by the depth of the imaging surveys that affects the density and purity of the photometric sample and its overlap in redshift with the quasar sample, which thus affects the performance of the method. When cross-correlating the photometric galaxies with quasars in the range 0.6 ≤ z ≤ 1.2, the cross-correlation function can provide better constraints on the comoving angular distance DM (6 per cent precision) compared to the constraint on the spherically averaged distance DV (9 per cent precision) obtained from the autocorrelation. Although not yet competitive, this technique will benefit from the arrival of deeper photometric data from upcoming surveys that will enable it to go beyond the current limitations we have identified in this work.
- Published
- 2021
39. Strong detection of the CMB lensing and galaxy weak lensing cross-correlation from ACT-DR4, Planck Legacy, and KiDS-1000
- Author
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Robertson, Naomi Clare, Alonso, David, Harnois-Déraps, Joachim, Darwish, Omar, Kannawadi, Arun, Amon, Alexandra, Asgari, Marika, Bilicki, Maciej, Calabrese, Erminia, Choi, Steve K, Devlin, Mark J, Dunkley, Jo, Dvornik, Andrej, Erben, Thomas, Ferraro, Simone, Fortuna, Maria Cristina, Giblin, Benjamin, Han, Dongwon, Heymans, Catherine, Hildebrandt, Hendrik, Hill, J Colin, Hilton, Matt, Ho, Shuay-Pwu P, Hoekstra, Henk, Hubmayr, Johannes, Hughes, John P, Joachimi, Benjamin, Joudaki, Shahab, Knowles, Kenda, Kuijken, Konrad, Madhavacheril, Mathew S, Moodley, Kavilan, Miller, Lance, Namikawa, Toshiya, Nati, Federico, Niemack, Michael D, Page, Lyman A, Partridge, Bruce, Schaan, Emmanuel, Schillaci, Alessandro, Schneider, Peter, Sehgal, Neelima, Sherwin, Blake D, Sifón, Cristóbal, Staggs, Suzanne T, Tröster, Tilman, van Engelen, Alexander, Valentijn, Edwin, Wollack, Edward J, Wright, Angus H, and Xu, Zhilei
- Subjects
gravitational lensing: weak ,large-scale structure of Universe ,cosmology: observations ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We measured the cross-correlation between galaxy weak lensing data from the Kilo Degree Survey (KiDS-1000, DR4) and cosmic microwave background (CMB) lensing data from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT, DR4) and the Planck Legacy survey. We used two samples of source galaxies, selected with photometric redshifts, (0.1 < zB < 1.2) and (1.2 < zB < 2), which produce a combined detection significance of the CMB lensing and weak galaxy lensing cross-spectrum of 7.7σ. With the lower redshift galaxy sample, for which the cross-correlation was detected at a significance of 5.3σ, we present joint cosmological constraints on the matter density parameter, ωm, and the matter fluctuation amplitude parameter, σ8, marginalising over three nuisance parameters that model our uncertainty in the redshift and shear calibration as well as the intrinsic alignment of galaxies. We find our measurement to be consistent with the best-fitting flat ΛCDM cosmological models from both Planck and KiDS-1000. We demonstrate the capacity of CMB weak lensing cross-correlations to set constraints on either the redshift or shear calibration by analysing a previously unused high-redshift KiDS galaxy sample (1.2 < zB < 2), with the cross-correlation detected at a significance of 7σ. This analysis provides an independent assessment for the accuracy of redshift measurements in a regime that is challenging to calibrate directly owing to known incompleteness in spectroscopic surveys.
- Published
- 2021
40. Planck constraints on the tensor-to-scalar ratio
- Author
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Tristram, M, Banday, AJ, Górski, KM, Keskitalo, R, Lawrence, CR, Andersen, KJ, Barreiro, RB, Borrill, J, Eriksen, HK, Fernandez-Cobos, R, Kisner, TS, Martínez-González, E, Partridge, B, Scott, D, Svalheim, TL, Thommesen, H, and Wehus, IK
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cosmology: observations ,cosmic background radiation ,cosmological parameters ,gravitational waves ,methods: data analysis ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical and Space Sciences - Abstract
We present constraints on the tensor-to-scalar ratio r using Planck data. We use the latest release of Planck maps, processed with the NPIPE code, which produces calibrated frequency maps in temperature and polarisation for all Planck channels from 30 GHz to 857 GHz using the same pipeline. We computed constraints on r using the BB angular power spectrum, and we also discuss constraints coming from the TT spectrum. Given Planck's noise level, the TT spectrum gives constraints on r that are cosmic-variance limited (with σr = 0.093), but we show that the marginalised posterior peaks towards negative values of r at about the 1.2σ level. We derived Planck constraints using the BB power spectrum at both large angular scales (the 'reionisation bump') and intermediate angular scales (the 'recombination bump') from ℓ = 2 to 150 and find a stronger constraint than that from TT, with σr = 0.069. The Planck BB spectrum shows no systematic bias and is compatible with zero, given both the statistical noise and the systematic uncertainties. The likelihood analysis using B modes yields the constraint r < 0.158 at 95% confidence using more than 50% of the sky. This upper limit tightens to r < 0.069 when Planck EE, BB, and EB power spectra are combined consistently, and it tightens further to r < 0.056 when the Planck TT power spectrum is included in the combination. Finally, combining Planck with BICEP2/Keck 2015 data yields an upper limit of r < 0.044.
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- 2021
41. Identification of AKARI infrared sources by the Deep HSC Optical Survey: construction of a new band-merged catalogue in the North Ecliptic Pole Wide field
- Author
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Kim, Seong Jin, Oi, Nagisa, Goto, Tomotsugu, Ikeda, Hiroyuki, Ho, Simon C-C, Shim, Hyunjin, Toba, Yoshiki, Hwang, Ho Seong, Hashimoto, Tetsuya, Barrufet, Laia, Malkan, Matthew, Kim, Helen K, Huang, Ting-Chi, Matsuhara, Hideo, Miyaji, Takamitsu, Pearson, Chris, Serjeant, Stephen, Santos, Daryl Joe D, Kim, Eunbin, Pollo, Agnieszka, Jeong, Woong-Seob, Wang, Ting-Wen, Momose, Rieko, and Takagi, Toshinobu
- Subjects
catalogues ,galaxies: evolution ,cosmology: observations ,infrared: galaxies ,astro-ph.GA ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
ABSTRACT The North Ecliptic Pole field is a natural deep-field location for many satellite observations. It has been targeted many times since it was surveyed by the AKARI space telescope with its unique wavelength coverage from the near- to mid-infrared (mid-IR). Many follow-up observations have been carried out, making this field one of the most frequently observed areas with a variety of facilities, accumulating abundant panchromatic data from the X-ray to the radio wavelength range. Recently, a deep optical survey with the Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) at the Subaru telescope covered the NEP-Wide (NEPW) field, which enabled us to identify faint sources in the near- and mid-IR bands, and to improve the photometric redshift (photo-z) estimation. In this work, we present newly identified AKARI sources by the HSC survey, along with multiband photometry for 91 861 AKARI sources observed over the NEPW field. We release a new band-merged catalogue combining various photometric data from the GALEX UV to submillimetre (sub-mm) bands (e.g. Herschel/SPIRE, JCMT/SCUBA-2). About ∼20 000 AKARI sources are newly matched to the HSC data, most of which seem to be faint galaxies in the near- to mid-infrared AKARI bands. This catalogue is motivating a variety of current research, and will be increasingly useful as recently launched (eROSITA/ART-XC) and future space missions (such as JWST, Euclid, and SPHEREx) plan to take deep observations in the NEP field.
- Published
- 2021
42. Identification of AKARI infrared sources by the Deep HSC Optical Survey: construction of a new band-merged catalogue in the North Ecliptic Pole Wide field
- Author
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Kim, Seong Jin, Oi, Nagisa, Goto, Tomotsugu, Ikeda, Hiroyuki, Ho, Simon C-C, Shim, Hyunjin, Toba, Yoshiki, Hwang, Ho Seong, Hashimoto, Tetsuya, Barrufet, Laia, Malkan, Matthew, Kim, Helen K, Huang, Ting-Chi, Matsuhara, Hideo, Miyaji, Takamitsu, Pearson, Chris, Serjeant, Stephen, Santos, Daryl Joe D, Kim, Eunbin, Pollo, Agnieszka, Jeong, Woong-Seob, Wang, Ting-Wen, Momose, Rieko, and Takagi, Toshinobu
- Subjects
catalogues ,galaxies: evolution ,cosmology: observations ,infrared: galaxies ,astro-ph.GA ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
The North Ecliptic Pole field is a natural deep-field location for many satellite observations. It has been targeted many times since it was surveyed by the AKARI space telescope with its unique wavelength coverage from the near- to mid-infrared (mid-IR). Many follow-up observations have been carried out, making this field one of the most frequently observed areas with a variety of facilities, accumulating abundant panchromatic data from the X-ray to the radio wavelength range. Recently, a deep optical survey with the Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) at the Subaru telescope covered the NEP-Wide (NEPW) field, which enabled us to identify faint sources in the near- and mid-IR bands, and to improve the photometric redshift (photo-z) estimation. In this work, we present newly identified AKARI sources by the HSC survey, along with multiband photometry for 91 861 AKARI sources observed over the NEPW field. We release a new band-merged catalogue combining various photometric data from the GALEX UV to submillimetre (sub-mm) bands (e.g. Herschel/SPIRE, JCMT/SCUBA-2). About ∼20 000 AKARI sources are newly matched to the HSC data, most of which seem to be faint galaxies in the near- to mid-infrared AKARI bands. This catalogue is motivating a variety of current research, and will be increasingly useful as recently launched (eROSITA/ART-XC) and future space missions (such as JWST, Euclid, and SPHEREx) plan to take deep observations in the NEP field.
- Published
- 2020
43. Strong dependence of Type Ia supernova standardization on the local specific star formation rate⋆
- Author
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Rigault, M, Brinnel, V, Aldering, G, Antilogus, P, Aragon, C, Bailey, S, Baltay, C, Barbary, K, Bongard, S, Boone, K, Buton, C, Childress, M, Chotard, N, Copin, Y, Dixon, S, Fagrelius, P, Feindt, U, Fouchez, D, Gangler, E, Hayden, B, Hillebrandt, W, Howell, DA, Kim, A, Kowalski, M, Kuesters, D, Leget, P-F, Lombardo, S, Lin, Q, Nordin, J, Pain, R, Pecontal, E, Pereira, R, Perlmutter, S, Rabinowitz, D, Runge, K, Rubin, D, Saunders, C, Smadja, G, Sofiatti, C, Suzuki, N, Taubenberger, S, Tao, C, and Thomas, RC
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Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,cosmology: observations ,cosmological parameters ,dark energy ,astro-ph.CO ,astro-ph.GA ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
As part of an on-going effort to identify, understand and correct for astrophysics biases in the standardization of Type Ia supernovae (SN Ia) for cosmology, we have statistically classified a large sample of nearby SNe Ia into those that are located in predominantly younger or older environments. This classification is based on the specific star formation rate measured within a projected distance of 1 kpc from each SN location (LsSFR). This is an important refinement compared to using the local star formation rate directly, as it provides a normalization for relative numbers of available SN progenitors and is more robust against extinction by dust. We find that the SNe Ia in predominantly younger environments are ΔY = 0.163 ± 0.029 mag (5.7σ) fainter than those in predominantly older environments after conventional light-curve standardization. This is the strongest standardized SN Ia brightness systematic connected to the host-galaxy environment measured to date. The well-established step in standardized brightnesses between SNe Ia in hosts with lower or higher total stellar masses is smaller, at ΔM = 0.119 ± 0.032 mag (4.5σ), for the same set of SNe Ia. When fit simultaneously, the environment-age offset remains very significant, with ΔY = 0.129 ± 0.032 mag (4.0σ), while the global stellar mass step is reduced to ΔM = 0.064 ± 0.029 mag (2.2σ). Thus, approximately 70% of the variance from the stellar mass step is due to an underlying dependence on environment-based progenitor age. Also, we verify that using the local star formation rate alone is not as powerful as LsSFR at sorting SNe Ia into brighter and fainter subsets. Standardization that only uses the SNe Ia in younger environments reduces the total dispersion from 0.142 ± 0.008 mag to 0.120 ± 0.010 mag. We show that as environment-ages evolve with redshift, a strong bias, especially on the measurement of the derivative of the dark energy equation of state, can develop. Fortunately, data that measure and correct for this effect using our local specific star formation rate indicator, are likely to be available for many next-generation SN Ia cosmology experiments.
- Published
- 2020
44. Planck intermediate results
- Author
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Akrami, Y, Ashdown, M, Aumont, J, Baccigalupi, C, Ballardini, M, Banday, AJ, Barreiro, RB, Bartolo, N, Basak, S, Benabed, K, Bernard, J-P, Bersanelli, M, Bielewicz, P, Bond, JR, Borrill, J, Bouchet, FR, Burigana, C, Calabrese, E, Carvalho, P, Chiang, HC, Crill, BP, Cuttaia, F, de Rosa, A, de Zotti, G, Delabrouille, J, Delouis, J-M, Di Valentino, E, Diego, JM, Dupac, X, Dusini, S, Efstathiou, G, Elsner, F, Enßlin, TA, Eriksen, HK, Fernandez-Cobos, R, Finelli, F, Fraisse, AA, Franceschi, E, Frolov, A, Galeotta, S, Ganga, K, Gerbino, M, González-Nuevo, J, Górski, KM, Gratton, S, Gruppuso, A, Gudmundsson, JE, Handley, W, Hansen, FK, Herranz, D, Hivon, E, Hobson, M, Huang, Z, Jones, WC, Keihänen, E, Keskitalo, R, Kim, J, Kisner, TS, Krachmalnicoff, N, Kunz, M, Kurki-Suonio, H, Lamarre, J-M, Lasenby, A, Lattanzi, M, Lawrence, CR, Le Jeune, M, Levrier, F, Lilje, PB, Lindholm, V, López-Caniego, M, Ma, Y-Z, Macías-Pérez, JF, Maggio, G, Mandolesi, N, Marcos-Caballero, A, Maris, M, Martin, PG, Martínez-González, E, Matarrese, S, Mauri, N, McEwen, JD, Migliaccio, M, Molinari, D, Moneti, A, Montier, L, Morgante, G, Natoli, P, Paoletti, D, Partridge, B, Perrotta, F, Pettorino, V, Piacentini, F, Polenta, G, Puget, J-L, Rachen, JP, Reinecke, M, Remazeilles, M, Renzi, A, Rocha, G, and Roudier, G
- Subjects
Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,catalogs ,cosmology: observations ,submillimeter: general ,astro-ph.GA ,astro-ph.CO ,astro-ph.IM ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
We describe an extension of the most recent version of the Planck Catalogue of Compact Sources (PCCS2), produced using a new multi-band Bayesian Extraction and Estimation Package (BeeP). BeeP assumes that the compact sources present in PCCS2 at 857 GHz have a dust-like spectral energy distribution (SED), which leads to emission at both lower and higher frequencies, and adjusts the parameters of the source and its SED to fit the emission observed in Planck's three highest frequency channels at 353, 545, and 857 GHz, as well as the IRIS map at 3000 GHz. In order to reduce confusion regarding diffuse cirrus emission, BeeP's data model includes a description of the background emission surrounding each source, and it adjusts the confidence in the source parameter extraction based on the statistical properties of the spatial distribution of the background emission. BeeP produces the following three new sets of parameters for each source: (a) fits to a modified blackbody (MBB) thermal emission model of the source; (b) SED-independent source flux densities at each frequency considered; and (c) fits to an MBB model of the background in which the source is embedded. BeeP also calculates, for each source, a reliability parameter, which takes into account confusion due to the surrounding cirrus. This parameter can be used to extract sub-samples of high-frequency sources with statistically well-understood properties. We define a high-reliability subset (BeeP/base), containing 26 083 sources (54.1% of the total PCCS2 catalogue), the majority of which have no information on reliability in the PCCS2. We describe the characteristics of this specific high-quality subset of PCCS2 and its validation against other data sets, specifically for: the sub-sample of PCCS2 located in low-cirrus areas; the Planck Catalogue of Galactic Cold Clumps; the Herschel GAMA15-field catalogue; and the temperature-and spectral-index-reconstructed dust maps obtained with Planck's Generalized Needlet Internal Linear Combination method. The results of the BeeP extension of PCCS2, which are made publicly available via the Planck Legacy Archive, will enable the study of the thermal properties of well-defined samples of compact Galactic and extragalactic dusty sources.
- Published
- 2020
45. Planck intermediate results: LVI. Detection of the CMB dipole through modulation of the thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect: Eppur si muove II
- Author
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Akrami, Y, Ashdown, M, Aumont, J, Baccigalupi, C, Ballardini, M, Banday, AJ, Barreiro, RB, Bartolo, N, Basak, S, Benabed, K, Bernard, JP, Bersanelli, M, Bielewicz, P, Bond, JR, Borrill, J, Bouchet, FR, Burigana, C, Calabrese, E, Cardoso, JF, Casaponsa, B, Chiang, HC, Combet, C, Contreras, D, Crill, BP, Cuttaia, F, De Bernardis, P, De Rosa, A, De Zotti, G, Delabrouille, J, Di Valentino, E, Diego, JM, Doré, O, Douspis, M, Dupac, X, Enßlin, TA, Eriksen, HK, Fernandez-Cobos, R, Finelli, F, Frailis, M, Franceschi, E, Frolov, A, Galeotta, S, Galli, S, Ganga, K, Génova-Santos, RT, Gerbino, M, González-Nuevo, J, Górski, KM, Gruppuso, A, Gudmundsson, JE, Handley, W, Herranz, D, Hivon, E, Huang, Z, Jaffe, AH, Jones, WC, Keihänen, E, Keskitalo, R, Kiiveri, K, Kim, J, Kisner, TS, Krachmalnicoff, N, Kunz, M, Kurki-Suonio, H, Lamarre, JM, Lattanzi, M, Lawrence, CR, Le Jeune, M, Levrier, F, Liguori, M, Lilje, PB, Lindholm, V, López-Caniego, M, Maciás-Pérez, JF, Maino, D, Mandolesi, N, Marcos-Caballero, A, Maris, M, Martin, PG, Martínez-González, E, Matarrese, S, Mauri, N, McEwen, JD, Mennella, A, Migliaccio, M, Molinari, D, Moneti, A, Montier, L, Morgante, G, Moss, A, Natoli, P, Pagano, L, Paoletti, D, Perrotta, F, Pettorino, V, Piacentini, F, Polenta, G, Rachen, JP, Reinecke, M, and Remazeilles, M
- Subjects
cosmic background radiation ,cosmology: observations ,relativistic processes ,reference systems ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical and Space Sciences - Abstract
The largest temperature anisotropy in the cosmic microwave background (CMB) is the dipole, which has been measured with increasing accuracy for more than three decades, particularly with the Planck satellite. The simplest interpretation of the dipole is that it is due to our motion with respect to the rest frame of the CMB. Since current CMB experiments infer temperature anisotropies from angular intensity variations, the dipole modulates the temperature anisotropies with the same frequency dependence as the thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich (tSZ) effect. We present the first, and significant, detection of this signal in the tSZ maps and find that it is consistent with direct measurements of the CMB dipole, as expected. The signal contributes power in the tSZ maps, which is modulated in a quadrupolar pattern, and we estimate its contribution to the tSZ bispectrum, noting that it contributes negligible noise to the bispectrum at relevant scales.
- Published
- 2020
46. Planck intermediate results: LV. Reliability and thermal properties of high-frequency sources in the Second Planck Catalogue of Compact Sources
- Author
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Akrami, Y, Ashdown, M, Aumont, J, Baccigalupi, C, Ballardini, M, Banday, AJ, Barreiro, RB, Bartolo, N, Basak, S, Benabed, K, Bernard, JP, Bersanelli, M, Bielewicz, P, Bond, JR, Borrill, J, Bouchet, FR, Burigana, C, Calabrese, E, Carvalho, P, Chiang, HC, Crill, BP, Cuttaia, F, De Rosa, A, De Zotti, G, Delabrouille, J, Delouis, JM, Di Valentino, E, Diego, JM, Dupac, X, Dusini, S, Efstathiou, G, Elsner, F, Enßlin, TA, Eriksen, HK, Fernandez-Cobos, R, Finelli, F, Fraisse, AA, Franceschi, E, Frolov, A, Galeotta, S, Ganga, K, Gerbino, M, González-Nuevo, J, Górski, KM, Gratton, S, Gruppuso, A, Gudmundsson, JE, Handley, W, Hansen, FK, Herranz, D, Hivon, E, Hobson, M, Huang, Z, Jones, WC, Keihänen, E, Keskitalo, R, Kim, J, Kisner, TS, Krachmalnicoff, N, Kunz, M, Kurki-Suonio, H, Lamarre, JM, Lasenby, A, Lattanzi, M, Lawrence, CR, Le Jeune, M, Levrier, F, Lilje, PB, Lindholm, V, López-Caniego, M, Ma, YZ, Macías-Pérez, JF, Maggio, G, Mandolesi, N, Marcos-Caballero, A, Maris, M, Martin, PG, Martínez-González, E, Matarrese, S, Mauri, N, McEwen, JD, Migliaccio, M, Molinari, D, Moneti, A, Montier, L, Morgante, G, Natoli, P, Paoletti, D, Partridge, B, Perrotta, F, Pettorino, V, Piacentini, F, Polenta, G, Puget, JL, Rachen, JP, Reinecke, M, Remazeilles, M, Renzi, A, Rocha, G, and Roudier, G
- Subjects
catalogs ,cosmology: observations ,submillimeter: general ,astro-ph.GA ,astro-ph.CO ,astro-ph.IM ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical and Space Sciences - Abstract
We describe an extension of the most recent version of the Planck Catalogue of Compact Sources (PCCS2), produced using a new multi-band Bayesian Extraction and Estimation Package (BeeP). BeeP assumes that the compact sources present in PCCS2 at 857 GHz have a dust-like spectral energy distribution (SED), which leads to emission at both lower and higher frequencies, and adjusts the parameters of the source and its SED to fit the emission observed in Planck's three highest frequency channels at 353, 545, and 857 GHz, as well as the IRIS map at 3000 GHz. In order to reduce confusion regarding diffuse cirrus emission, BeeP's data model includes a description of the background emission surrounding each source, and it adjusts the confidence in the source parameter extraction based on the statistical properties of the spatial distribution of the background emission. BeeP produces the following three new sets of parameters for each source: (a) fits to a modified blackbody (MBB) thermal emission model of the source; (b) SED-independent source flux densities at each frequency considered; and (c) fits to an MBB model of the background in which the source is embedded. BeeP also calculates, for each source, a reliability parameter, which takes into account confusion due to the surrounding cirrus. This parameter can be used to extract sub-samples of high-frequency sources with statistically well-understood properties. We define a high-reliability subset (BeeP/base), containing 26 083 sources (54.1% of the total PCCS2 catalogue), the majority of which have no information on reliability in the PCCS2. We describe the characteristics of this specific high-quality subset of PCCS2 and its validation against other data sets, specifically for: the sub-sample of PCCS2 located in low-cirrus areas; the Planck Catalogue of Galactic Cold Clumps; the Herschel GAMA15-field catalogue; and the temperature-and spectral-index-reconstructed dust maps obtained with Planck's Generalized Needlet Internal Linear Combination method. The results of the BeeP extension of PCCS2, which are made publicly available via the Planck Legacy Archive, will enable the study of the thermal properties of well-defined samples of compact Galactic and extragalactic dusty sources.
- Published
- 2020
47. Planck intermediate results: LVII. Joint Planck LFI and HFI data processing
- Author
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Akrami, Y, Andersen, KJ, Ashdown, M, Baccigalupi, C, Ballardini, M, Banday, AJ, Barreiro, RB, Bartolo, N, Basak, S, Benabed, K, Bernard, JP, Bersanelli, M, Bielewicz, P, Bond, JR, Borrill, J, Burigana, C, Butler, RC, Calabrese, E, Casaponsa, B, Chiang, HC, Colombo, LPL, Combet, C, Crill, BP, Cuttaia, F, De Bernardis, P, De Rosa, A, De Zotti, G, Delabrouille, J, DI Valentino, E, DIego, JM, Doré, O, Douspis, M, Dupac, X, Eriksen, HK, Fernandez-Cobos, R, Finelli, F, Frailis, M, Fraisse, AA, Franceschi, E, Frolov, A, Galeotta, S, Galli, S, Ganga, K, Gerbino, M, Ghosh, T, González-Nuevo, J, Górski, KM, Gruppuso, A, Gudmundsson, JE, Handley, W, Helou, G, Herranz, D, Hildebrandt, SR, Hivon, E, Huang, Z, Jaffe, AH, Jones, WC, Keihänen, E, Keskitalo, R, Kiiveri, K, Kim, J, Kisner, TS, Krachmalnicoff, N, Kunz, M, Kurki-Suonio, H, Lasenby, A, Lattanzi, M, Lawrence, CR, Le Jeune, M, Levrier, F, Liguori, M, Lilje, PB, Lilley, M, Lindholm, V, López-Caniego, M, Lubin, PM, MacÍas-Pérez, JF, Maino, D, Mandolesi, N, Marcos-Caballero, A, Maris, M, Martin, PG, Martínez-González, E, Matarrese, S, Mauri, N, McEwen, JD, Meinhold, PR, Mennella, A, Migliaccio, M, Mitra, S, Molinari, D, Montier, L, Morgante, G, Moss, A, Natoli, P, Paoletti, D, Partridge, B, Patanchon, G, Pearson, D, and Pearson, TJ
- Subjects
cosmic background radiation ,cosmology: observations ,cosmological parameters ,Galaxy: general ,methods: data analysis ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical and Space Sciences - Abstract
We present the NPIPE processing pipeline, which produces calibrated frequency maps in temperature and polarization from data from the Planck Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) and High Frequency Instrument (HFI) using high-performance computers. NPIPE represents a natural evolution of previous Planck analysis efforts, and combines some of the most powerful features of the separate LFI and HFI analysis pipelines. For example, following the LFI 2018 processing procedure, NPIPE uses foreground polarization priors during the calibration stage in order to break scanning-induced degeneracies. Similarly, NPIPE employs the HFI 2018 time-domain processing methodology to correct for bandpass mismatch at all frequencies. In addition, NPIPE introduces several improvements, including, but not limited to: inclusion of the 8% of data collected during repointing manoeuvres; smoothing of the LFI reference load data streams; in-flight estimation of detector polarization parameters; and construction of maximally independent detector-set split maps. For component-separation purposes, important improvements include: maps that retain the CMB Solar dipole, allowing for high-precision relative calibration in higher-level analyses; well-defined single-detector maps, allowing for robust CO extraction; and HFI temperature maps between 217 and 857 GHz that are binned into 0′.9 pixels (Nside = 4096), ensuring that the full angular information in the data is represented in the maps even at the highest Planck resolutions. The net effect of these improvements is lower levels of noise and systematics in both frequency and component maps at essentially all angular scales, as well as notably improved internal consistency between the various frequency channels. Based on the NPIPE maps, we present the first estimate of the Solar dipole determined through component separation across all nine Planck frequencies. The amplitude is (3366.6 ± 2.7) μK, consistent with, albeit slightly higher than, earlier estimates. From the large-scale polarization data, we derive an updated estimate of the optical depth of reionization of τ = 0.051 ± 0.006, which appears robust with respect to data and sky cuts. There are 600 complete signal, noise and systematics simulations of the full-frequency and detector-set maps. As a Planck first, these simulations include full time-domain processing of the beam-convolved CMB anisotropies. The release of NPIPE maps and simulations is accompanied with a complete suite of raw and processed time-ordered data and the software, scripts, auxiliary data, and parameter files needed to improve further on the analysis and to run matching simulations.
- Published
- 2020
48. Removing imaging systematics from galaxy clustering measurements with Obiwan: application to the SDSS-IV extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey emission-line galaxy sample
- Author
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Kong, Hui, Burleigh, Kaylan J, Ross, Ashley, Moustakas, John, Chuang, Chia-Hsun, Comparat, Johan, de Mattia, Arnaud, du Mas des Bourboux, Hélion, Honscheid, Klaus, Lin, Sichen, Raichoor, Anand, Rossi, Graziano, and Zhao, Cheng
- Subjects
Astronomical Sciences ,Physical Sciences ,Bioengineering ,large-scale structure of Universe ,cosmology: observations ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical sciences ,Particle and high energy physics ,Space sciences - Abstract
This work presents the application of a new tool, Obiwan, which uses image simulations to determine the selection function of a galaxy redshift survey and calculate three-dimensional (3D) clustering statistics. Obiwan relies on a forward model of the process by which images of the night sky are transformed into a 3D large-scale structure catalogue, and offers several advantages over more traditional map-based techniques - such as operating on individual exposures and adopting a maximum likelihood approach. The photometric pipeline automatically detects and models galaxies and then generates a catalogue of such galaxies with detailed information for each one of them, including their location, redshift, and so on. Systematic biases in the imaging data are therefore imparted into the catalogues and must be accounted for in any scientific analysis of their information content. Obiwan simulates this process for samples selected from the Legacy Surveys imaging data. This imaging data will be used to select target samples for the next-generation Dark Energy Spectroscopic Instrument (DESI) experiment. Here, we apply Obiwan to a portion of the SDSS-IV extended Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey emission-line galaxies (ELGs). Systematic biases in the data are clearly identified and removed. We compare the 3D clustering results to those obtained by the map-based approach applied to the complete eBOSS Data Release 16 (DR16) sample. We find the results are consistent, thereby validating the eBOSS DR16 ELG catalogues, which is used to obtain cosmological results.
- Published
- 2020
49. Planck 2018 results: VII. Isotropy and statistics of the CMB
- Author
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Akrami, Y, Ashdown, M, Aumont, J, Baccigalupi, C, Ballardini, M, Banday, AJ, Barreiro, RB, Bartolo, N, Basak, S, Benabed, K, Bersanelli, M, Bielewicz, P, Bock, JJ, Bond, JR, Borrill, J, Bouchet, FR, Boulanger, F, Bucher, M, Burigana, C, Butler, RC, Calabrese, E, Cardoso, JF, Casaponsa, B, Chiang, HC, Colombo, LPL, Combet, C, Contreras, D, Crill, BP, De Bernardis, P, De Zotti, G, Delabrouille, J, Delouis, JM, Di Valentino, E, Diego, JM, Doré, O, Douspis, M, Ducout, A, Dupac, X, Efstathiou, G, Elsner, F, Enßlin, TA, Eriksen, HK, Fantaye, Y, Fernandez-Cobos, R, Finelli, F, Frailis, M, Fraisse, AA, Franceschi, E, Frolov, A, Galeotta, S, Galli, S, Ganga, K, Génova-Santos, RT, Gerbino, M, Ghosh, T, González-Nuevo, J, Górski, KM, Gruppuso, A, Gudmundsson, JE, Hamann, J, Handley, W, Hansen, FK, Herranz, D, Hivon, E, Huang, Z, Jaffe, AH, Jones, WC, Keihänen, E, Keskitalo, R, Kiiveri, K, Kim, J, Krachmalnicoff, N, Kunz, M, Kurki-Suonio, H, Lagache, G, Lamarre, JM, Lasenby, A, Lattanzi, M, Lawrence, CR, Le Jeune, M, Levrier, F, Liguori, M, Lilje, PB, Lindholm, V, López-Caniego, M, Ma, YZ, Maciás-Pérez, JF, Maggio, G, Maino, D, Mandolesi, N, Mangilli, A, Marcos-Caballero, A, Maris, M, Martin, PG, Martínez-González, E, Matarrese, S, Mauri, N, McEwen, JD, Meinhold, PR, and Mennella, A
- Subjects
cosmology: observations ,cosmic background radiation ,polarization ,methods: data analysis ,methods: statistical ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomy & Astrophysics ,Astronomical and Space Sciences - Abstract
Analysis of the Planck 2018 data set indicates that the statistical properties of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature anisotropies are in excellent agreement with previous studies using the 2013 and 2015 data releases. In particular, they are consistent with the Gaussian predictions of the ΛCDM cosmological model, yet also confirm the presence of several so-called "anomalies"on large angular scales. The novelty of the current study, however, lies in being a first attempt at a comprehensive analysis of the statistics of the polarization signal over all angular scales, using either maps of the Stokes parameters, Q and U, or the E-mode signal derived from these using a new methodology (which we describe in an appendix). Although remarkable progress has been made in reducing the systematic effects that contaminated the 2015 polarization maps on large angular scales, it is still the case that residual systematics (and our ability to simulate them) can limit some tests of non-Gaussianity and isotropy. However, a detailed set of null tests applied to the maps indicates that these issues do not dominate the analysis on intermediate and large angular scales (i.e., ℓ 400). In this regime, no unambiguous detections of cosmological non-Gaussianity, or of anomalies corresponding to those seen in temperature, are claimed. Notably, the stacking of CMB polarization signals centred on the positions of temperature hot and cold spots exhibits excellent agreement with the ΛCDM cosmological model, and also gives a clear indication of how Planck provides state-of-the-art measurements of CMB temperature and polarization on degree scales.
- Published
- 2020
50. Planck 2018 results: IV. Diffuse component separation
- Author
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Akrami, Y, Ashdown, M, Aumont, J, Baccigalupi, C, Ballardini, M, Banday, AJ, Barreiro, RB, Bartolo, N, Basak, S, Benabed, K, Bersanelli, M, Bielewicz, P, Bond, JR, Borrill, J, Bouchet, FR, Boulanger, F, Bucher, M, Burigana, C, Calabrese, E, Cardoso, JF, Carron, J, Casaponsa, B, Challinor, A, Colombo, LPL, Combet, C, Crill, BP, Cuttaia, F, De Bernardis, P, De Rosa, A, De Zotti, G, Delabrouille, J, Delouis, JM, Di Valentino, E, Dickinson, C, Diego, JM, Donzelli, S, Doré, O, Ducout, A, Dupac, X, Efstathiou, G, Elsner, F, Enßlin, TA, Eriksen, HK, Falgarone, E, Fernandez-Cobos, R, Finelli, F, Forastieri, F, Frailis, M, Fraisse, AA, Franceschi, E, Frolov, A, Galeotta, S, Galli, S, Ganga, K, Génova-Santos, RT, Gerbino, M, Ghosh, T, González-Nuevo, J, Górski, KM, Gratton, S, Gruppuso, A, Gudmundsson, JE, Handley, W, Hansen, FK, Helou, G, Herranz, D, Hildebrandt, SR, Huang, Z, Jaffe, AH, Karakci, A, Keihänen, E, Keskitalo, R, Kiiveri, K, Kim, J, Kisner, TS, Krachmalnicoff, N, Kunz, M, Kurki-Suonio, H, Lagache, G, Lamarre, JM, Lasenby, A, Lattanzi, M, Lawrence, CR, Le Jeune, M, Levrier, F, Liguori, M, Lilje, PB, Lindholm, V, López-Caniego, M, Lubin, PM, Ma, YZ, Maciás-Pérez, JF, Maggio, G, Maino, D, Mandolesi, N, Mangilli, A, Marcos-Caballero, A, Maris, M, Martin, PG, and Martínez-González, E
- Subjects
ISM: general ,cosmology: observations ,cosmic background radiation ,diffuse radiation ,Galaxy: general ,astro-ph.CO ,Astronomical and Space Sciences ,Astronomy & Astrophysics - Abstract
We present full-sky maps of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) and polarized synchrotron and thermal dust emission, derived from the third set of Planck frequency maps. These products have significantly lower contamination from instrumental systematic effects than previous versions. The methodologies used to derive these maps follow closely those described in earlier papers, adopting four methods (Commander, NILC, SEVEM, and SMICA) to extract the CMB component, as well as three methods (Commander, GNILC, and SMICA) to extract astrophysical components. Our revised CMB temperature maps agree with corresponding products in the Planck 2015 delivery, whereas the polarization maps exhibit significantly lower large-scale power, reflecting the improved data processing described in companion papers; however, the noise properties of the resulting data products are complicated, and the best available end-to-end simulations exhibit relative biases with respect to the data at the few percent level. Using these maps, we are for the first time able to fit the spectral index of thermal dust independently over 3° regions. We derive a conservative estimate of the mean spectral index of polarized thermal dust emission of βd = 1.55 ± 0.05, where the uncertainty marginalizes both over all known systematic uncertainties and different estimation techniques. For polarized synchrotron emission, we find a mean spectral index of βs = -3.1 ± 0.1, consistent with previously reported measurements. We note that the current data processing does not allow for construction of unbiased single-bolometer maps, and this limits our ability to extract CO emission and correlated components. The foreground results for intensity derived in this paper therefore do not supersede corresponding Planck 2015 products. For polarization the new results supersede the corresponding 2015 products in all respects.
- Published
- 2020
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