1,903 research outputs found
Maximum likelihood, parametric component separation and CMB B-mode detection in suborbital experiments
We investigate the performance of the parametric Maximum Likelihood component
separation method in the context of the CMB B-mode signal detection and its
characterization by small-scale CMB suborbital experiments. We consider
high-resolution (FWHM=8') balloon-borne and ground-based observatories mapping
low dust-contrast sky areas of 400 and 1000 square degrees, in three frequency
channels, 150, 250, 410 GHz, and 90, 150, 220 GHz, with sensitivity of order 1
to 10 micro-K per beam-size pixel. These are chosen to be representative of
some of the proposed, next-generation, bolometric experiments. We study the
residual foreground contributions left in the recovered CMB maps in the pixel
and harmonic domain and discuss their impact on a determination of the
tensor-to-scalar ratio, r. In particular, we find that the residuals derived
from the simulated data of the considered balloon-borne observatories are
sufficiently low not to be relevant for the B-mode science. However, the
ground-based observatories are in need of some external information to permit
satisfactory cleaning. We find that if such information is indeed available in
the latter case, both the ground-based and balloon-borne experiments can detect
the values of r as low as ~0.04 at 95% confidence level. The contribution of
the foreground residuals to these limits is found to be then subdominant and
these are driven by the statistical uncertainty due to CMB, including E-to-B
leakage, and noise. We emphasize that reaching such levels will require a
sufficient control of the level of systematic effects present in the data.Comment: 18 pages, 12 figures, 6 table
A Comparison of Methods for Determining the Molecular Content of Model Galaxies
Recent observations indicate that star formation occurs only in the molecular
phase of a galaxy's interstellar medium. A realistic treatment of star
formation in simulations and analytic models of galaxies therefore requires
that one determine where the transition from the atomic to molecular gas
occurs. In this paper we compare two methods for making this determination in
cosmological simulations where the internal structures of molecular clouds are
unresolved: a complex time-dependent chemistry network coupled to a radiative
transfer calculation of the dissociating ultraviolet (UV) radiation field, and
a simple time-independent analytic approximation. We show that these two
methods produce excellent agreement at all metallicities >~10^-2 of the Milky
Way value across a very wide range of UV fields. At lower metallicities the
agreement is worse, likely because time-dependent effects become important;
however, there are no observational calibrations of molecular gas content at
such low metallicities, so it is unclear if either method is accurate. The
comparison suggests that, in many but not all applications, the analytic
approximation provides a viable and nearly cost-free alternative to full
time-dependent chemistry and radiative transfer.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, accepted to ApJ, emulateapj format. This version
contains typo corrections and changes to figure presentation, but is
otherwise the same as the previous versio
Fluoxetine prevents development of an early stress-related molecular signature in the rat infralimbic medial prefrontal cortex : implications for depression?
Background: Psychological stress, particularly in chronic form, can lead to mood and cognitive dysfunction and is a major risk factor in the development of depressive states. How stress affects the brain to cause psychopathologies is incompletely understood. We sought to characterise potential depression related mechanisms by analysing gene expression and molecular pathways in the infralimbic medial prefrontal cortex (ILmPFC), following a repeated psychological stress paradigm. The ILmPFC is thought to be involved in the processing of emotionally contextual information and in orchestrating the related autonomic responses, and it is one of the brain regions implicated in both stress responses and depression. Results: Genome-wide microarray analysis of gene expression showed sub-chronic restraint stress resulted predominantly in a reduction in transcripts 24 hours after the last stress episode, with 239 genes significantly decreased, while just 24 genes had increased transcript abundance. Molecular pathway analysis using DAVID identified 8 pathways that were significantly enriched in the differentially expressed gene list, with genes belonging to the brain-derived neurotrophic factor – neurotrophin receptor tyrosine kinase 2 (BDNF-Ntrk2) pathway most enriched. Of the three intracellular signalling pathways that are downstream of Ntrk2, real-time quantitative PCR confirmed that only the PI3K-AKT-GSK3B and MAPK/ERK pathways were affected by sub-chronic stress, with the PLCγ pathway unaffected. Interestingly, chronic antidepressant treatment with the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor, fluoxetine, prevented the stress-induced Ntrk2 and PI3K pathway changes, but it had no effect on the MAPK/ERK pathway. Conclusions: These findings indicate that abnormal BDNF-Ntrk2 signalling may manifest at a relatively early time point, and is consistent with a molecular signature of depression developing well before depression-like behaviours occur. Targeting this pathway prophylactically, particularly in depression-susceptible individuals, may be of therapeutic benefit
Assumptions of the primordial spectrum and cosmological parameter estimation
The observables of the perturbed universe, CMB anisotropy and large
structures, depend on a set of cosmological parameters, as well as, the assumed
nature of primordial perturbations. In particular, the shape of the primordial
power spectrum (PPS) is, at best, a well motivated assumption. It is known that
the assumed functional form of the PPS in cosmological parameter estimation can
affect the best fit parameters and their relative confidence limits. In this
paper, we demonstrate that a specific assumed form actually drives the best fit
parameters into distinct basins of likelihood in the space of cosmological
parameters where the likelihood resists improvement via modifications to the
PPS. The regions where considerably better likelihoods are obtained allowing
free form PPS lie outside these basins. In the absence of a preferred model of
inflation, this raises a concern that current cosmological parameters estimates
are strongly prejudiced by the assumed form of PPS. Our results strongly
motivate approaches toward simultaneous estimation of the cosmological
parameters and the shape of the primordial spectrum from upcoming cosmological
data. It is equally important for theorists to keep an open mind towards early
universe scenarios that produce features in the PPS.Comment: 11 pages, 2 figures, discussions extended, main results unchanged,
matches published versio
Evading the pulsar constraints on the cosmic string tension in supergravity inflation
The cosmic string is a useful probe of the early Universe and may give us a
clue to physics at high energy scales where any artificial particle
accelerators cannot reach. Although one of the most promising tools is the
cosmic microwave background, the constraint from gravitational waves is
becoming so stringent that one may not hope to detect its signatures in the
cosmic microwave background. In this paper, we construct a scenario that
contains cosmic strings observable in the cosmic microwave background while
evading the constraint imposed by the recent pulsar timing data. We argue that
cosmic strings with relatively large tension are allowed by delaying the onset
of the scaling regime. We also show that this scenario is naturally realized in
the context of chaotic inflation in supergravity, where the phase transition is
governed by the Hubble induced mass.Comment: 24pages, 3 figures, published in JCA
Cosmological constraints on neutrino plus axion hot dark matter: Update after WMAP-5
We update our previous constraints on two-component hot dark matter (axions
and neutrinos), including the recent WMAP 5-year data release. Marginalising
over sum m_nu provides m_a < 1.02 eV (95% C.L.) for the axion mass. In the
absence of axions we find sum m_nu < 0.63 eV (95% C.L.).Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, uses iopart.cls; v2 matches published versio
Constraining super-critical string/brane cosmologies with astrophysical data
We discuss fits of unconventional dark energy models to the available data
from high-redshift supernovae, distant galaxies and baryon oscillations. The
models are based either on brane cosmologies or on Liouville strings in which a
relaxation dark energy is provided by a rolling dilaton field (Q-cosmology).
Such cosmologies feature the possibility of effective four-dimensional
negative-energy dust and/or exotic scaling of dark matter. We find evidence for
a negative-energy dust at the current era, as well as for exotic-scaling
(a^{-delta}) contributions to the energy density, with delta ~= 4, which could
be due to dark matter coupling with the dilaton in Q-cosmology models. We
conclude that Q-cosmology fits the data equally well with the LambdaCDM model
for a range of parameters that are in general expected from theoretical
considerations.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, Contributed to 11th International Conference on
Topics in Astroparticle and Underground Physics (TAUP 2009) 1-5 Jul 2009,
Rome, Italy; J. Phys. Conf. Series to appea
Running Spectral Index from Inflation with Modulations
We argue that a large negative running spectral index, if confirmed, might
suggest that there are abundant structures in the inflaton potential, which
result in a fairly large (both positive and negative) running of the spectral
index at all scales. It is shown that the center value of the running spectral
index suggested by the recent CMB data can be easily explained by an inflaton
potential with superimposed periodic oscillations. In contrast to cases with
constant running, the perturbation spectrum is enhanced at small scales, due to
the repeated modulations. We mention that such features at small scales may be
seen by 21 cm observations in the future.Comment: 7 pages, 6 figures, v2: published in JCA
Model selection applied to reconstruction of the Primordial Power Spectrum
The preferred shape for the primordial spectrum of curvature perturbations is
determined by performing a Bayesian model selection analysis of cosmological
observations. We first reconstruct the spectrum modelled as piecewise linear in
\log k between nodes in k-space whose amplitudes and positions are allowed to
vary. The number of nodes together with their positions are chosen by the
Bayesian evidence, so that we can both determine the complexity supported by
the data and locate any features present in the spectrum. In addition to the
node-based reconstruction, we consider a set of parameterised models for the
primordial spectrum: the standard power-law parameterisation, the spectrum
produced from the Lasenby & Doran (LD) model and a simple variant
parameterisation. By comparing the Bayesian evidence for different classes of
spectra, we find the power-law parameterisation is significantly disfavoured by
current cosmological observations, which show a preference for the LD model.Comment: Minor changes to match version accepted by JCA
The Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) Source Catalog
We present the list of point sources found in the WMAP 5-year maps. The
technique used in the first-year and three-year analysis now finds 390 point
sources, and the five-year source catalog is complete for regions of the sky
away from the galactic plane to a 2 Jy limit, with SNR > 4.7 in all bands in
the least covered parts of the sky. The noise at high frequencies is still
mainly radiometer noise, but at low frequencies the CMB anisotropy is the
largest uncertainty. A separate search of CMB-free V-W maps finds 99 sources of
which all but one can be identified with known radio sources. The sources seen
by WMAP are not strongly polarized. Many of the WMAP sources show significant
variability from year to year, with more than a 2:1 range between the minimum
and maximum fluxes.Comment: 31 pages Latex with 4 embedded figures. Version accepted by the ApJ
Supplement
- …
