Estimating the bispectrum of the Very Small Array data
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 352:3 (2004) 887-902
Abstract:
We estimate the bispectrum of the Very Small Array data from the compact and extended configuration observations released in 2002 December, and compare our results with those obtained from Gaussian simulations. There is a slight excess of large bispectrum values for two individual fields, but this does not appear when the fields are combined. Given our expected level of residual point sources, we do not expect these to be the source of the discrepancy. Using the compact configuration data, we put an upper limit of 5400 on the value of F NL, the non-linear coupling parameter, at 95 per cent confidence. We test our bispectrum estimator using non-Gaussian simulations with a known bispectrum, and recover the input values.The SAURON project - III. Integral-field absorption-line kinematics of 48 elliptical and lenticular galaxies
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 352:3 (2004) 721-743
Abstract:
We present the stellar kinematics of 48 representative elliptical and lenticular galaxies obtained with our custom-built integral-field spectrograph SAURON operating on the William Herschel Telescope. The data were homogeneously processed through a dedicated reduction and analysis pipeline. All resulting SAURON data cubes were spatially binned to a constant minimum signal-to-noise ratio. We have measured the stellar kinematics with an optimized (penalized pixel-fitting) routine which fits the spectra in pixel space, via the use of optimal templates, and prevents the presence of emission lines to affect the measurements. We have thus generated maps of the mean stellar velocity V, the velocity dispersion σ, and the Gauss-Hermite moments h3 and h4 of the line-of-sight velocity distributions. The maps extend to approximately one effective radius. Many objects display kinematic twists, kinematically decoupled components, central stellar discs, and other peculiarities, the nature of which will be discussed in future papers of this series.The cosmic evolution of low-luminosity radio sources from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Data Release 1
\mnras 352 (2004) 909-914-909-914
CLOVER - A new instrument for measuring the B-mode polarization of the CMB
XXXIX Rencontres de Moriond, Exploring the Universe, La Thuile (2004)
Abstract:
We describe the design and expected performance of Clover, a new instrument designed to measure the B-mode polarization of the cosmic microwave background. The proposed instrument will comprise three independent telescopes operating at 90, 150 and 220 GHz and is planned to be sited at Dome C, Antarctica. Each telescope will feed a focal plane array of 128 background-limited detectors and will measure polarized signals over angular multipoles 20 < l < 1000. The unique design of the telescope and careful control of systematics should enable the B-mode signature of gravitational waves to be measured to a lensing-confusion-limited tensor-to-scalar ratio r~0.005.Deep SAURON spectral imaging of the diffuse Lyman α halo LAB1 in SSA 22
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 351:1 (2004) 63-69