Direct photon results from CDF

16th International Symposium on Lepton and Photon Interactions

Authors:

F Abe, others

Dynamical modeling of SAURON galaxies

Proceedings of IUTAM Symposia and Summer Schools IUTAM 3

Authors:

Michele Cappellari, RCEVD Bosch, EK Verolme, R Bacon, Martin Bureau, Y Copin, RL Davies, E Emsellem, D Krajnovic, H Kuntschner, R McDermid, BW Miller, RF Peletier, PTD Zeeuw

Abstract:

We describe our program for the dynamical modeling of early-type galaxies observed with the panoramic integral-field spectrograph SAURON. We are using Schwarzschild's numerical orbit superposition method to reproduce in detail all kinematical and photometric observables, and recover the intrinsic orbital structure of the galaxies. Since catastrophes are the most prominent features in the orbital observables, two-dimensional kinematical coverage is essential to constrain the dynamical models.

Finding radio transients

Abstract:

Modern radio telescopes are data-intensive machines, producing many TB of data every night. Amongst this deluge of data are transient and variable phenomena, whose study can shed new light on processes as varied as stellar dynamos and the accretion discs in supermassive black holes. In this work I demonstrate the applicability of different methods to the discovery of these astrophysical transients and variables coming from telescopes such as MeerKAT.

I first consider a standard approach to discovering transients by characterising their variability. By making use of even modest sampling with the high sensitivity and wide field of view of MeerKAT, I demonstrate how we are now able to uncover new transients almost by accident - if we exclude the vast amount of time spent planning, building and operating excellent telescopes, efficient pipelines and well- crafted observing proposals. In this work I found a stellar flare from a nearby M dwarf, which was then followed up and complemented by optical and X-ray photometry and spectroscopy, providing new insights on the system.

Next I built a citizen science platform in order to perform such transient searches at scale, making use of a wide range of data available in the MeerKAT archive. I detail the process of review and beta-testing that resulted in the final design of the Bursts from Space: MeerKAT project. Over 1000 volunteers took part, demonstrating a healthy appetite for further Zooniverse data releases. Volunteers discovered or recovered a wide range of phenomena, from flare stars and pulsars to scintillating AGN and transient OH maser emission. I was also able to use the known transients in our fields to understand some reasons why interesting sources may be missed and will fold this learning through to future iterations of the project. This is the first demonstration of volunteers finding radio transients in images.

Finally, I show how anomaly detection, an unsupervised machine learning approach, is a suitable tool for finding these variable phenomena at scale, as is required for modern astronomical surveys. I use three feature sets as applied to two anomaly detection techniques in the Astronomaly package and analyse anomaly detection performance by comparison with citizen science labels. By using transients found by citizen scientists as a ground truth I demonstrate that anomaly detection techniques can recall over half of the radio transients within 10% of the sample dataset. I find that the choice of feature set is crucial, especially when considering available resources for human inspection and follow-up. I find that active learning on ∼2% of the data improves recall by up to 10%, depending on the feature-model pair. The best performing feature-model pairs result in a factor of 5 times fewer sources requiring vetting by humans. This is the first effort to apply anomaly detection techniques to finding radio transients and shows great promise for application to other datasets, a real-time transient detection system and upcoming large surveys.

HST imaging of hyperluminous infrared galaxies

Authors:

D Farrah, Aprajita Verma, S Oliver, M Rowan-Robinson, R McMahon

Abstract:

We present HST WFPC2 I band imaging for a sample of 9 Hyperluminous Infrared Galaxies spanning a redshift range 0.45 < z < 1.34. Three of the sample have morphologies showing evidence for interactions, six are QSOs. Host galaxies in the QSOs are reliably detected out to z ~ 0.8. The detected QSO host galaxies have an elliptical morphology with scalelengths spanning 6.5 < r_{e}(Kpc) < 88 and absolute k corrected magnitudes spanning -24.5 < M_{I} < -25.2. There is no clear correlation between the IR power source and the optical morphology. None of the sources in the sample, including F15307+3252, show any evidence for gravitational lensing. We infer that the IR luminosities are thus real. Based on these results, and previous studies of HLIRGs, we conclude that this class of object is broadly consistent with being a simple extrapolation of the ULIRG population to higher luminosities; ULIRGs being mainly violently interacting systems powered by starbursts and/or AGN. Only a small number of sources whose infrared luminosities exceed 10^{13}Lsun are intrinsically less luminous objects which have been boosted by gravitational lensing.

JWST detection of heavy neutron capture elements in a compact object merger

Authors:

Andrew Levan, Benjamin Gompertz, Om Sharan Salafia, Mattia Bulla, Eric Burns, Kenta Hotokezaka, Luca Izzo, Gavin Lamb, Daniele Malesani, Samantha Oates, Maria Ravasio, Alicia Rouco Escorial, Benjamin Schneider, Nikhil Sarin, Steve Schulze, Nial Tanvir, Kendall Ackley, Gemma Anderson, Gabriel Brammer, Lise Christensen, Vikram Dhillon, Phil Evans, Michael Fausnaugh, Wen-fai Fong, Andrew Fruchter, Chris Fryer, Johan Fynbo, Nicola Gaspari, Kasper Heintz, Jens Hjorth, Jamie Kennea, Mark Kennedy, Tanmoy Laskar, Giorgos Leloudas, Ilya Mandel, Antonio Martín-Carrillo, Brian Metzger, Matt Nicholl, Anya Nugent, Jesse Palmerio, Giovanna Pugilese, Jillian Rastinejad, Lauren Rhodes, Andrea Rossi, Stephen Smartt, Heloise Stevance, Aaron Tohuvavohu, Alexander van der Horst, Susanna Vergani, Darach Watson, Thomas Barclay, Kornpob Bhirombhakdi, Elme Breedt, Alice Breeveld, Alex Brown, Sergio Campana, Paolo D'Avanzo, Valerio D'Elia, Massimiliano De Pasquale, Martin Dyer, Duncan Galloway, James Garbutt, Matthew Green, Dieter Hartmann, Pall Jakobsson, Paul Kerry, Danial Langeroodi, James Leung, Stuart Littlefair, James Munday, Paul O'Brien, Steven Parsons, Ingrid Pelisoli, Dave Sahman, Ruben Salvaterra, Gianpiero Tagliaferri, Christina Thöne, Antonio de Ugarte Postigo, Boris Sbarufatti, Ashley Chrimes, Danny Steeghs, David Kann