1901.06326
Detecting baryon acoustic oscillations in dark matter from kinematic weak lensing surveys
Ding, Seo, Huff, Saito, Clowe
Investigate the feasibility of extracting BAO from cosmic shear tomography. Particularly focus on the BAO scale precision that can be achieved by future spectroscopy-based, kinematic weak lensing (KWL) surveys (Huff 2013) in comparison to the traditional photometry-based WL surveys. Simulate cosmic shear tomography data of such surveys with a few simple assumptions to focus on the BAO information, extract the spatial power spectrum, and constrain the recovered BAO feature. Due to the small shape noise and the shape of the lensing kernel, find that a DE Task Force Stage IV version of such KWL survey can detect the BAO feature in DM by 3 sigma and measure the BAO scale at the precision level of 4% while it will be difficult to detect the feature in photometry-based WL surveys. With a more optimistic assumption, a KWL-Stage IV could achieve a ~2% BAO scale measurement with 4.9 sigma confidence. A built-in spectroscopic galaxy survey within such KWL survey will allow cross-correlation between galaxies and cosmic shear, which will tighten the constraint beyond the lower limit presented in this paper, and therefore allow a detection of the BAO scale bias between galaxies and DM.
1901.03712
Compact galaxies at intermediate redshifts quench faster than normal-sized galaxies
Nogueira-Cavalcante, et al
Massive quiescent compact galaxies have been discovered at high zs, associated with rapid compaction and cessation of SF. In this work, set out to quantify the time-scales in which SF is quenched in compact galaxies at intermediate redshifts. For this, select a sample of green valley galaxies within the COSMOS field in the midst of quenching their SF at 0.5<z<1.0 that exhibit varying degrees of compactness. Based on the H-delta absorption line and the 4000 AA peak of coated zCOSMOS spectra for sub-samples of normal-sized and compact galaxies, determine quenching time-scales as a function of compactness. Find that the SF quenching time-scales in green valley compact galaxies are much shorter than in normal-sized ones. In an effort to understand this trend, use the Illustris sim to trace the evolution of the SF history, the growth rate of the central SMBH and the AGN-feedback in compact and normal-sized galaxies. Find that the key difference between their SF quenching time-scales is linked to the mode of the AGN-feedback. In the compact galaxies predominates the kinematic-mode, which is highly efficient at quenching the SF by depleting the internal gas. On the normal-sized galaxies, the prevailing thermal-mode injects energy in the circumgalactic gas, impeding the cold gas supply and quenching the SF via the slower strangulation mechanism. These results are consistent with the violent disk instability and gas-rich mergers scenarios, followed by strong AGN and stellar feedback. Although this kind of event is most expected to occur at z=2-3, find evidences that the formation of compact quiescent galaxies can occur at z<1.
1901.03822
Strong evidence that the Galactic bulge is shining in gamma rays
Macias, et al
There is growing evidence that the Galactic Center Excess identified in the Fermi-LAT gamma-ray data arises from a population of faint astrophysical sources. Provide compelling supporting evidence by showing that the morphology of the excess traces the stellar over-density of the Galactic bulge. By adopting a template of the bulge stars obtained from a triaxial 3D fit to the diffuse near-infrared emission, show that it is detected at high significance. The significance deteriorates when either the position or the orientation of the template is artificially shifted, supporting the correlation of the gamma-ray data with the Galactic bulge. In deriving these results, used more sophisticated templates at low-latitudes for the Fermi bubbles compared to previous work and the 3D Inverse Compton (IC) maps recently released by the GALPROP team. The results provide strong constraints on Millisecond Pulsar (MSP) formation scenarios proposed to explain the excess. Find that an admixture formation scenario, in which some the relevant binaries are primordial and the rest are formed dynamically, is preferred over a primordial-only formation scenario at 3.5 sigma CL. The detailed morphological analysis also disfavors models of the disrupted globular cluster scenario that predict a spherical symmetric distribution of MSPs in the Galactic bulge. For the first time, report evidence of a high energy tail in the nuclear bulge spectrum that could be the result of IC emission from electrons and positrons injected by a population of MSPs and SF activity from the same site.
1901.04634
Cosmology from the Chinese Space Station Optical Survey (CSS-OS)
Gong, et al
The CSS-OS is a planned full sky survey operated by the Chinese Space Station Telescope (CSST). It can simultaneously perform the photometric imaging and spectroscopic slitless surveys, and will probe weak and strong gravitational lensing, galaxy clustering, individual galaxies and galaxy clusters, AGNs, and so on. It aims to explore the properties of DM and DE and other important cosmological problems. In this work, focus on two main CSS-OS scientific goals, i.e. the WL and galaxy clustering surveys. Generate the mock CSS-OS data based on the observational COSMOS and zCOSMOS catalogs. Investigate the constraints on the cosmological parameters from the CSS-OS using the MCMC method. The intrinsic alignments, galaxy bias, velocity dispersion, and systematics from instrumental effects in the CSST WL and galaxy clustering surveys are also included, and their impacts on the constraint results are discussed. Find that the CSS-OS can improve the constraints on the cosmological parameters by a factor of a few (even one order of magnitude in the optimistic case), compared to the current WL and galaxy clustering surveys. The constraints can be further enhanced when performing joint analysis with the WL, galaxy clustering, and gg-lensing data. The CSS-OS is expected to be a powerful survey for exploring the Universe.