The progenitor mass of the Type IIP supernova SN 2004et from late-time spectral modeling
(2012)
Future Science Prospects for AMI
ArXiv 1208.1966 (2012)
Abstract:
The Arcminute Microkelvin Imager (AMI) is a telescope specifically designed for high sensitivity measurements of low-surface-brightness features at cm-wavelength and has unique, important capabilities. It consists of two interferometer arrays operating over 13.5-18 GHz that image structures on scales of 0.5-10 arcmin with very low systematics. The Small Array (AMI-SA; ten 3.7-m antennas) couples very well to Sunyaev-Zel'dovich features from galaxy clusters and to many Galactic features. The Large Array (AMI-LA; eight 13-m antennas) has a collecting area ten times that of the AMI-SA and longer baselines, crucially allowing the removal of the effects of confusing radio point sources from regions of low surface-brightness, extended emission. Moreover AMI provides fast, deep object surveying and allows monitoring of large numbers of objects. In this White Paper we review the new science - both Galactic and extragalactic - already achieved with AMI and outline the prospects for much more.Search for charged Higgs bosons decaying via H± → τν in tt̄ events using pp collision data at √s = 7 TeV with the ATLAS detector
Journal of High Energy Physics 2012:6 (2012)