Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30
Showing votes from 2018-11-02 13:30 to 2018-11-06 11:30 | Next meeting is Friday Sep 26th, 11:30 am.
We study the scaling relations between dark matter (DM) haloes and galaxy discs using 175 galaxies from the SPARC database. We explore two cosmologically motivated DM halo profiles: the Einasto profile from DM-only simulations and the DC14 profile from hydrodynamic simulations. We fit the observed rotation curves using a Markov Chain Monte Carlo method and break the disc-halo degeneracy using near-infrared photometry and $\Lambda$CDM-motivated priors. We find that the characteristic volume density $\rho_{\rm s}$ of DM haloes is nearly constant over $\sim$5 decades in galaxy luminosity. The scale radius $r_s$ and the characteristic surface density $\rho_s\cdot r_s$, instead, correlate with galaxy luminosity. These scaling relations provide an empirical benchmark to cosmological simulations of galaxy formation.
Viewing two sources at sufficient distance and angular separation can assure, by light-travel-time arguments, the acausality of their emitted photons. Using these photons to set different apparatus parameters in a laboratory-based quantum-mechanical experiment could ensure those settings are independent too, allowing a decisive, loophole-free test of Bell's inequality. Quasars are a natural choice for such objects, as they are visible up to high redshift and pointlike. Yet applying them at the ultimate limit of the technique involves flux measurements in opposite directions on the sky. This presents a challenge to proving randomness against either noise or an underlying signal. By means of a "virtual" experiment and simple signal-to-noise calculations, bias in ground-based optical photometry while performing an Earth-wide test is explored, imposed by fluctuating sky conditions and instrumental errors including photometric zeropoints. Analysis for one useful dataset from the Gemini 8-meter telescopes is presented, using over 14 years of archival images obtained with their Multi-Object Spectrograph (GMOS) instrument pair, serendipitously sampling thousands of quasars up to 180 degrees apart. These do show correlation: an average pairwise broadband optical flux difference intriguingly consistent with the form of Bell's inequality. That is interesting in itself, if not also a harm to experimental setting independence; some considerations for future observations are discussed.