Time-lapse imagery and volunteer classifications from the Zooniverse Penguin Watch project.

Scientific data (2018)

Authors:

FM Jones, C Allen, C Arteta, J Arthur, C Black, LM Emmerson, R Freeman, G Hines, CJ Lintott, Z Macháčková, G Miller, R Simpson, C Southwell, HR Torsey, A Zisserman, Tom Hart

Abstract:

Automated time-lapse cameras can facilitate reliable and consistent monitoring of wild animal populations. In this report, data from 73,802 images taken by 15 different Penguin Watch cameras are presented, capturing the dynamics of penguin (Spheniscidae; Pygoscelis spp.) breeding colonies across the Antarctic Peninsula, South Shetland Islands and South Georgia (03/2012 to 01/2014). Citizen science provides a means by which large and otherwise intractable photographic data sets can be processed, and here we describe the methodology associated with the Zooniverse project Penguin Watch, and provide validation of the method. We present anonymised volunteer classifications for the 73,802 images, alongside the associated metadata (including date/time and temperature information). In addition to the benefits for ecological monitoring, such as easy detection of animal attendance patterns, this type of annotated time-lapse imagery can be employed as a training tool for machine learning algorithms to automate data extraction, and we encourage the use of this data set for computer vision development.

A three-phase amplification of the cosmic magnetic field in galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 479:3 (2018) 3343-3365

Authors:

S Martin-Alvarez, Julien EG Devriendt, Adrianne Slyz, R Teyssier

Abstract:

Arguably the main challenge of galactic magnetism studies is to explain how the interstellar medium of galaxies reaches energetic equipartition despite the extremely weak cosmic primordial magnetic fields that are originally predicted to thread the inter-galactic medium. Previous numerical studies of isolated galaxies suggest that a fast dynamo amplification might suffice to bridge the gap spanning many orders of magnitude in strength between the weak early Universe magnetic fields and the ones observed in high redshift galaxies. To better understand their evolution in the cosmological context of hierarchical galaxy growth, we probe the amplification process undergone by the cosmic magnetic field within a spiral galaxy to unprecedented accuracy by means of a suite of constrained transport magnetohydrodynamical adaptive mesh refinement cosmological zoom simulations with different stellar feedback prescriptions. A galactic turbulent dynamo is found to be naturally excited in this cosmological environment, being responsible for most of the amplification of the magnetic energy. Indeed, we find that the magnetic energy spectra of simulated galaxies display telltale inverse cascades. Overall, the amplification process can be divided in three main phases, which are related to different physical mechanisms driving galaxy evolution: an initial collapse phase, an accretion-driven phase, and a feedback-driven phase. While different feedback models affect the magnetic field amplification differently, all tested models prove to be subdominant at early epochs, before the feedback-driven phase is reached. Thus the three-phase evolution paradigm is found to be quite robust vis-a-vis feedback prescriptions.

A three-phase amplification of the cosmic magnetic field in galaxies

(2018)

Authors:

Sergio Martin-Alvarez, Julien Devriendt, Adrianne Slyz, Romain Teyssier

Inflation in a scale-invariant universe

PHYSICAL REVIEW D 97:12 (2018) ARTN 123516

Authors:

Pedro G Ferreira, Christopher T Hill, Johannes Noller, Graham G Ross

Model independent inference of the expansion history and implications for the growth of structure

PHYSICAL REVIEW D 97:12 (2018) ARTN 123501

Authors:

Shahab Joudaki, Manoj Kaplinghat, Ryan Keeley, David Kirkby