Ground-based gamma-ray astronomy has had a major breakthrough with the impressive results obtained using systems of imaging atmospheric Cherenkov telescopes. Ground-based gamma-ray astronomy has a huge potential in astrophysics, particle physics and cosmology. CTA is an international initiative to build the next generation instrument, with a factor of 5-10 improvement in sensitivity in the 100 GeV-10 TeV range and the extension to energies well below 100 GeV and above 100 TeV. CTA will consist of two arrays (one in the north, one in the south) for full sky coverage and will be operated as open observatory. The design of CTA is based on currently available technology. This document reports on the status and presents the major design concepts of CTA.
The Square Kilometre Array (SKA) will have a low frequency component (SKA-low) which has as one of its main science goals the study of the redshifted 21cm line from the earliest phases of star and galaxy formation in the Universe. This 21cm signal provides a new and unique window both on the time of the formation of the first stars and accreting black holes and the subsequent period of substantial ionization of the intergalactic medium. The signal will teach us fundamental new things about the earliest phases of structure formation, cosmology and even has the potential to lead to the discovery of new physical phenomena. Here we present a white paper with an Executive SummaryThe Square Kilometre Array (SKA) will have a low frequency component (AA-low/SKA-low 1 ) which has as one of its main science goals the study of the redshifted 21cm line from the earliest phases of star and galaxy formation in the Universe (see SKA Memo 125). It is during this phase that the first building blocks of the galaxies that we see around us today, including our own Milky Way, were formed. It is a crucial period for understanding the history of the Universe and one for which we have currently very little observational data.We divide the period into two different phases based on the physical processes which affect the Intergalactic Medium. The first period, which we call the Cosmic Dawn, saw the formation of the first stars and accreting black holes, which changed the quantum state of the still neutral Intergalactic Medium. The second period, known as the Epoch of Reionization, is the one during which large areas between the galaxies were photo-ionized by the radiation produced in galaxies and which ended when the Intergalactic Medium had become completely ionized.Observations of the redshifted 21-cm line with SKA will provide a new and unique window on the entire period of Cosmic Dawn and Reionization. The signal is sensitive to the emergence of the first stellar populations, radiation from growing massive black holes and the formation of larger groups of galaxies and bright quasars. At the same time it maps the distribution of most of the baryonic matter in the Universe. The study of the redshifted 21cm line will teach us fundamental new things about the earliest phases of structure formation and cosmology. It even has the potential to lead to the discovery of new physical phenomena. Here we present an overview of the science questions that SKA-low can address, how we plan to tackle these questions and what this implies for the basic design of the telescope.The redshifted 21cm signal will be analyzed with different techniques, which each come with their own requirements for the SKA: (i) Tomography, (ii) power-spectra and higher-order statistics, (iii) hydrogen absorption, (iv) global/total-intensity signal. Whereas all precursors/pathfinders aim to study the signal statistically through its power spectrum, SKA will be able to image the neutral hydrogen distribution directly and its focus will therefore be more on tomograph...
Abstract. Recent theoretical yields and chemical evolution models demonstrate that intermediate-mass AGB stars cannot reproduce the observed abundance distributions of O, Na, Mg, and Al. As a further observational test of this finding, we present elemental abundance ratios [X/Fe] for 20 elements in 38 bright giants of the globular cluster NGC 6752 based on highresolution, high signal-to-noise spectra obtained with UVES on the VLT. This is the most complete spectroscopic analysis of this cluster in terms of the number of elements considered and the number of stars in the sample. The stars span more than 1000 K in effective temperature and more than 3 visual magnitudes along the red giant branch.
The fraction of ionizing photons that escape (f esc ) from z 6 galaxies is an important parameter for assessing the role of these objects in the reionization of the universe, but the opacity of the intergalactic medium precludes a direct measurement of f esc for individual galaxies at these epochs. We argue that since f esc regulates the impact of nebular emission on the spectra of galaxies, it should nonetheless be possible to indirectly probe f esc well into the reionization epoch. As a first step, we demonstrate that by combining measurements of the rest-frame UV slope β with the equivalent width of the Hβ emission line, galaxies with very high Lyman continuum escape fractions (f esc 0.5) should be identifiable up to z ≈ 9 through spectroscopy with the upcoming James Webb Space Telescope (JWST). By targeting strongly lensed galaxies behind low-redshift galaxy clusters, JWST spectra of sufficiently good quality can be obtained for M 1500 −16.0 galaxies at z ≈ 7 and for M 1500 −17.5 galaxies at z ≈ 9. Dust-obscured star formation may complicate the analysis, but supporting observations with ALMA or the planned SPICA mission may provide useful constraints on this effect.
Aims. This study aims to characterize linear polarization structures in LOFAR observations of the interstellar medium (ISM) in the 3C 196 field, one of the primary fields of the LOFAR-Epoch of Reionization key science project. Methods. We have used the high band antennas (HBA) of LOFAR to image this region and rotation measure (RM) synthesis to unravel the distribution of polarized structures in Faraday depth. Results. The brightness temperature of the detected Galactic emission is 5−15 K in polarized intensity and covers the range from -3 to +8 rad m −2 in Faraday depth. The most interesting morphological feature is a strikingly straight filament at a Faraday depth of +0.5 rad m −2 running from north to south, right through the centre of the field and parallel to the Galactic plane. There is also an interesting system of linear depolarization canals conspicuous in an image showing the peaks of Faraday spectra. We used the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT) at 350 MHz to image the same region. For the first time, we see some common morphology in the RM cubes made at 150 and 350 MHz. There is no indication of diffuse emission in total intensity in the interferometric data, in line with results at higher frequencies and previous LOFAR observations. Based on our results, we determined physical parameters of the ISM and proposed a simple model that may explain the observed distribution of the intervening magneto-ionic medium. Conclusions. The mean line-of-sight magnetic field component, B , is determined to be 0.3 ± 0.1 µG and its spatial variation across the 3C 196 field is 0.1 µG. The filamentary structure is probably an ionized filament in the ISM, located somewhere within the Local Bubble. This filamentary structure shows an excess in thermal electron density (n e B > 6.2 cm −3 µG) compared to its surroundings.
We use numerical simulations to study the effects of the patchiness of a partly reionized intergalactic medium (IGM) on the observability of Lyα emitters (LAEs) at high redshifts (z 6).We present a new model that divides the Lyα radiative transfer into a (circum-)galactic and an extragalactic (IGM) part, and investigate how the choice of intrinsic line model affects the IGM transmission results. We use our model to study the impact of neutral hydrogen on statistical observables such as the Lyα restframe equivalent width (REW) distribution, the LAE luminosity function and the two-point correlation function. We find that if the observed changes in LAE luminosity functions and equivalent width distributions between z ∼ 6 and z ∼ 7 are to be explained by an increased IGM neutral fraction alone, we require an extremely late and rapid reionization scenario, where the Universe was ∼ 40 % ionized at z = 7, ∼ 50 % ionized at z = 6.5 and ∼ 100 % ionized at z = 6. This is in conflict with other observations, suggesting that intrinsic LAE evolution at z 6 cannot be completely neglected. We show how the two-point correlation function can provide more robust constraints once future observations obtain larger LAE samples, and provide predictions for the sample sizes needed to tell different reionization scenarios apart.
We present a detailed comparison of three different simulations of the epoch of reionization (EoR). The radiative transfer simulation (C 2 -RAY) among them is our benchmark. Radiative transfer codes can produce realistic results, but are computationally expensive. We compare it with two semi-numerical techniques: one using the same halos as C 2 -RAY as its sources (SemNum), and one using a conditional Press-Schechter scheme (CPS+GS). These are vastly more computationally efficient than C 2 -RAY, but use more simplistic physical assumptions. We evaluate these simulations in terms of their ability to reproduce the history and morphology of reionization. We find that both Sem-Num and CPS+GS can produce an ionization history and morphology that is very close to C 2 -RAY, with Sem-Num performing slightly better compared to CPS+GS.We also study different redshift space observables of the 21-cm signal from EoR: the variance, power spectrum and its various angular multipole moments. We find that both seminumerical models perform reasonably well in predicting these observables at length scales relevant for present and future experiments. However, Sem-Num performs slightly better than CPS+GS in producing the reionization history, which is necessary for interpreting the future observations. The CPS+GS scheme, however, has the advantage that it is not restricted by the mass resolution of the dark matter density field.
With its unprecedented light-collecting area for night-sky observations, the Cherenkov Telescope Array (CTA) holds great potential for also optical stellar astronomy, in particular as a multi-element intensity interferometer for realizing imaging with sub-milliarcsecond angular resolution. Such an order-of-magnitude increase of the spatial resolution achieved in optical astronomy will reveal the surfaces of rotationally flattened stars with structures in their circumstellar disks and winds, or the gas flows between close binaries. Image reconstruction is feasible from the second-order coherence of light, measured as the temporal correlations of arrival times between photons recorded in different telescopes. This technique (once pioneered by Hanbury Brown and Twiss) connects telescopes only with electronic signals and is practically insensitive to atmospheric turbulence and to imperfections in telescope optics. Detector and telescope requirements are very similar to those for imaging air Cherenkov observatories, the main difference being the signal processing (calculating cross correlations between single camera pixels in pairs of telescopes). Observations of brighter stars are not limited by sky brightness, permitting efficient CTA use during also bright-Moon periods. While other concepts have been proposed to realize kilometer-scale optical interferometers of conventional amplitude (phase-) type, both in space and on the ground, their complexity places them much further into the future than CTA, which thus could become the first kilometer-scale optical imager in astronomy. (C) 2012 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved
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