School of Physics - Theses

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    Nature of quasar disk-wind
    Yong, Suk Yee ( 2019)
    The brightest persistent astrophysical sources in the universe are quasars, a group of active galactic nuclei (AGN) that appear star-like and radiate across all wavelengths. The emitted radiation is believed to be powered by a supermassive black hole at the core of a galaxy. Matter that falls into the black hole is being fed onto the accretion disk, heating up the disk in the process due to friction. A wind emanating from the accretion disk, or a disk-wind, appears ubiquitous in these objects and acts as one effective way to generate the spectral lines observed in the quasar's spectrum. The broad spectral lines, originating from the broad line region (BLR), show diverse properties, specifically in velocity shift, line width, and degree of asymmetry. Yet, the exact structure of the BLR has remained perplexing due to its small size, which means it is unresolved even with the current astronomical instrumentation. Thus, simulations are important. By developing a model of the BLR, an informative analysis of the line profiles allows us to explore some of the key questions about the BLR, emphasising the shape of spectral lines, the disk-wind BLR, and the orientation. We simulate line profile modelling using a simple kinematical disk-wind model of the BLR with radiative transfer in the high velocity limit. The model provides a framework to explore the characteristics of the emission line profile induced by the different geometries and kinematics of the BLR, including the opening angle of the wind and the geometry of the line emitting region. The effect of orientation in these systems is also examined. As a first step, we use the model to simulate a narrow outflowing disk-wind, which has been described in the literature. The primary objective is to determine whether the observed emission line properties are consistent with a narrow wind scenario. We find that the line profiles are more blueshifted for a narrow polar wind model as opposed to intermediate and equatorial models. When viewing at pole-on angles, the simulated emission lines show a narrower line width, which is asymmetric and more blueshifted than that viewed edge-on. The blueward shift of the line profile increases as the line-of-sight and wind intersect. The model is also able to recover a shorter time delay in the red or blue side of the line profiles, consistent with observational evidence in reverberation mapping studies. The second part of the thesis considers the properties of broad absorption line quasars (BALQs). These objects are rare and often display a blueward absorption trough relative to the emission line. One interpretation of the velocity offsets is the unification based on orientation, whereby a BAL is viewed within a constrained narrow wind angle. In order to test whether the BALQs and non-BALQs can be distinguished by their emission features, we conduct statistical tests and machine learning on the two populations. We find that their continuum and emission features are qualitatively similar, which contradicts the narrow disk-wind model in the geometric unification. Therefore, we propose a model of the disk-wind comprising a wide wind opening angle with multiple dense radial streams, where the BAL is detected when the line-of-sight crosses these streams. These findings have lead us to the discovery of a novel orientation indicator of quasars in the ultraviolet-optical regime. We propose a simple yet robust angle-of-viewing probe using the correlation between the velocity shifts and line widths. Our idea is shown to be qualitatively consistent with other orientation proxies. We also perform a wide angle disk-wind simulation and successfully retrieve the predicted correlation with inclination. In addition, we extend our model to estimate the bias in the virial black hole mass due to the scale factor f, which is related to the unknown nature of the BLR. Using a wide disk-wind configuration, we retrieve the f factors for a range of inclination angle. The f factor shows significant dependence with orientation, characterisation of the line width, and location of the emission region in the wind. Therefore, using a constant f value biases the estimation of the mass of the black hole.
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    Simulations of source recovery and completeness in galaxy surveys at high redshift
    Carrasco Nunez, Daniela Patricia ( 2018)
    The search for and characterisation of galaxies at high-redshift is a very active topic in Astrophysics. Thanks to advances in observations from space, the redshift frontier is approaching the epoch of formation of first generation objects. Thus, these samples of galaxies can give us insight into the processes that govern galaxy formation and evolution. One of the key observables used to characterise galaxy populations throughout the cosmic history is their luminosity function (number of galaxies per unit luminosity per unit volume), which requires knowledge and characterisation of the completeness and selection functions of a survey, in addition to the catalogue of discovered objects. In this thesis, we present a search for high-redshift galaxies (redshift z > 6) in two in the Hubble Space Telescope surveys, the Brightest of Reionizing Galaxies Survey (BoRG), and the Reionization Lensing Cluster Survey (RELICS) using a photometric selection technique (the Lyman break dropout selection). We aim at using the resulting galaxy candidates to estimate a new measurement of the luminosity function at z ~ 10. To achieve that, we develop GLACiAR, an open Python-based tool available on GitHub, which is designed to estimate the completeness and selection functions in galaxy surveys. The code is tailored for multiband imaging datasets aimed at searching for high-redshift galaxies through the Lyman Break technique, but it can be applied broadly. The code generates artificial galaxies that follow Sérsic profiles with different indexes and with customisable size, redshift and spectral energy distribution properties, adds them to input images, and measures the recovery rate. We finally apply GLACiAR to quantify the completeness and redshift selection functions for J-dropouts sources (redshift z ~ 10 galaxies). Our comparison with a previous completeness analysis on the same dataset shows overall agreement, but also highlights how different modelling assumptions for artificial sources can impact completeness estimates.
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    PUMA and MAJICK: cross-matching and imaging techniques for a detection of the epoch of reionisation
    Line, Jack ( 2017)
    The epoch of reionisation (EoR) is one of the last unknowns in observational cosmology. After recombination, when the Universe cooled sufficiently and collapsed into neutral hydrogen (HI), the Universe was devoid of any light sources. During this cosmic ‘dark age’, the Universe was completely opaque to ultra-violet radiation, due to the abundance of HI. After some time, the very first luminous sources formed via gravitational collapse, and began to ionise the surrounding HI. Eventually the Universe transitioned from opaque to transparent, allowing us once again to peer into the cosmic depths. The exact timing and manner of the EoR has never been observed, and is paramount to confirming our the wealth of theoretical understanding. A new generation of low radio-frequency interferometers have opened a window to explore the EoR, by tracing the evolution of 21 cm radiation from HI. The experiment hinges upon our ability to remove astrophysical foregrounds; extragalactic radio-loud galaxies and galactic diffuse synchrotron emission all conspire to drown out the EoR signal. In the first part of this thesis, we develop a new cross-matching method in order to create the most accurate radio source foreground model possible. We go on to apply this technique to catalogue creation and verification, and investigate the effects of accurate source positions in foreground removal. We comment on how this technique can inform next generation instrument design, such as the upcoming instrument SKA_LOW. In the second part, we investigate averaging interferometric data as a potential method to reduce both the enormous data loads that interferometers produce, and the contamination caused by far-field sources. Averaging inherently causes signal loss, with the amplitude of the loss dependent on the scale and layout of the telescope, and so its impact on a potential EoR measurement must be well understood. We develop simulation and imaging software with new functionality to achieve this.
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    Phenomenology of particle dark matter
    Leane, Rebecca Kate ( 2017)
    The fundamental nature of dark matter (DM) remains unknown. In this thesis, we explore new ways to probe properties of particle DM across different phenomenological settings. In the first part of this thesis, we overview evidence, candidates and searches for DM. In the second part of this thesis, we focus on model building and signals for DM searches at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Specifically, in Chapter 2, the use of effective field theories (EFTs) for DM at the LHC is explored. We show that many widely used EFTs are not gauge invariant, and how, in the context of the mono-W signal, their use can lead to unphysical signals at the LHC. To avoid such issues, the next iteration of a minimal DM framework, called simplified models, are considered. We discuss use of such models at the LHC in Chapter 3, and show that in the context of a renormalizable gauge-invariant theory, any isospin violating effects in mono-W signals cannot be large. In Chapter 4, we discuss an alternative search strategy to mono-X searches at the LHC — in the case that DM does not couple directly to hadrons, the mono-X signature does not exist, and instead a leptophilic DM signature can be probed. We focus on the prospects for leptophilic DM with a spin-1 mediator at the LHC, and discuss constraints from other experiments. In the third part of this thesis, we turn to astrophysical signals of DM. In Chapter 5, we show that a consequence of enforcing gauge invariance in simplified DM models provides a new dominant s-wave DM annihilation process for indirect detection searches, and set limits on the annihilation cross section from Pass 8 observations of the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope. In Chapter 6, we demonstrate the impact of mass generation for simplified models, finding that the relic density and indirect detection constraints, along with the DM interaction types, are strongly dictated by the mass generation mechanism chosen. In Chapter 7, we show that the multi-mediator approach advocated in the previous two chapters can also lead to a new dominant signal, in the form of dark initial state radiation. Finally in Chapter 8, we look to the Sun to find that if DM annihilates to long-lived mediators, the gamma rays and neutrinos produced can be strongly probed by gamma-ray telescopes and observatories Fermi-LAT, HAWC, and LHAASO, as well as neutrino telescopes IceCube and KM3Net. Interestingly, these telescopes can provide the strongest probe of the DM spin dependent scattering cross section, outperforming standard high-energy solar neutrino searches and direct detection experiments by several orders of magnitude.
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    Dark matter halos in the early Universe
    Angel, Paul ( 2016)
    We use high resolution N-Body simulations to study the properties of dark matter halos during the Epoch of Reionization. The halo concentration and spin parameters are measured in the mass range 10^8Msun/ h < M < 10^11M sun/h and redshifts 55 concentration-mass (c(M)) relation that is almost flat and well described by a simple power-law for both NFW and Einasto fits. The equilibrium state of the halo has a significant effect on the resulting concentrations. We also measure the spin distribution and spin mass relation, which has a weak dependence on equilibrium state. The spin virial mass relation has a mild negative correlation at high redshift. The correlation between the local density (the environment) of a halo and its formation history is examined. There is very little correlation between the formation time of a halo with local density, but some correlation between environment and the number of mergers the halo has experienced since formation.
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    Direct shear mapping: the first technique to measure weak gravitational shear directly
    de Burgh-Day, Catherine Odelia ( 2015)
    This thesis develops and tests a new technique, called Direct Shear Mapping (DSM), to measure weak gravitational lensing shear, $\gamma$, directly from observations of a single background source. The technique assumes the velocity map of an un-lensed, stably-rotating galaxy will be rotationally symmetric. Lensing distorts the velocity map, making it asymmetric. The degree of lensing can be inferred by determining the transformation required to restore axisymmetry. This technique is in contrast to traditional weak lensing methods, which require averaging an ensemble of background galaxy ellipticity measurements, to obtain a single shear measurement. The accuracy of the fitting algorithm is tested in simulated data with a suite of systematic tests. It is demonstrated that in principle shears as small as $0.01$ can be measured. The shear is then fitted in very low redshift (and hence un-lensed) velocity maps, and a null result is obtained with an error of $\pm 0.01$. The high sensitivity achievable with DSM results from analysing spatially resolved spectroscopic images, including not just shape information (as in traditional weak lensing measurements) but velocity information as well. To investigate the prospects for making nonzero shear measurements with DSM in current and future surveys, a theoretical estimate is made of the frequency of galaxy-galaxy weak lensing at low redshift. The probability of weak lensing at low redshifts is found to be good (1 in 1,000 galaxies at $z\sim 0.2$). An algorithm is then presented to make an empirically driven estimate of the frequency of occurrence of weak lensing in existing low redshift galaxy survey data. This algorithm is applied to the Galaxy and Mass Assembly Phase 1 Survey Data Release 2 catalogue. It is estimated that to a redshift of $z\sim 0.6$, the probability of a galaxy being weakly lensed by at least $\gamma = 0.02$ is $\sim$0.01. A technique is then demonstrated to measure the scatter in the stellar mass-halo mass relation using a simulated sample of low redshift DSM shear measurements. It is estimated that for a shear measurement error of $\Delta\gamma = 0.02$, this measurement could be made with a sample of $\sim$50,000 spatially and spectrally resolved galaxies. Finally, the first step towards extending DSM to incorporate weak lensing flexion is made. Including flexion in a lensing analysis increases the sensitivity of weak lensing measurements, and facilitates measurement of the gradient of the gravitational potential. Weak lensing convergence, shear, and flexion field variables are derived for a generalised lensing mass, without assuming circular symmetry. It is shown that the equations reduce back to the correct expressions for simple lens mass distributions, and when solved numerically for circularly symmetric lenses reproduce the results obtained for analytical solutions. Finally, the equations are solved numerically for a simple non-circularly symmetric lens.
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    Gravitational lensing and clustering of galaxies in the epoch of reionization
    Barone-Nugent, Robert Luke ( 2015)
    The epoch of reionization marks the period where neutral hydrogen in the intergalactic medium was ionized by high energy photons emitted by the first stars and galaxies. Observations of galaxies during this period aim to uncover the types of stars and galaxies that were responsible for producing the ionizing flux to complete reionization within one billion years after the Big Bang (by z~6), and study the formation of the first galaxies in the Universe. These galaxies are observed in the near-infrared (NIR) today, and so require space-based observatories with sensitive NIR cameras such as Wide Field Camera 3 on the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). Considerable effort has been dedicated to ultradeep observations with HST in order to identify galaxies in the epoch of reionization. Surveys such as the eXtreme Deep Field (XDF), Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS), Early Release Science (ERS) and the Brightest of Reionizing Galaxies (BoRG) have now discovered hundreds of these galaxies. This thesis makes use of these observations to address two important topics: how gravitational lensing affects the observations of such galaxies, and what their spatial distribution can tell us about the underlying dark matter distribution at this early time. Photons emitted by the first galaxies traverse most of the Universe’s history before reaching our telescopes. As such, they are subject to gravitational lensing by foreground galaxies along the line of sight. Gravitational lensing can result in the magnification of high redshift galaxies, skewing their observed luminosities. Because bright galaxies are significantly rarer than their fainter counterparts, the chance of gravitational magnification for observationally bright galaxies is significantly enhanced. This effect is known as magnification bias. We use the largest samples of Lyman-break galaxy (LBG) candidates observed in the first 1:5 billion years after the Big Bang (46.5. The clustering signal at z~7 is detected at >4 sigma, and corresponds to a real-space correlation length of r_0 = 6.7 +0.9/-1.0 cMpc, a galaxy bias of b = 8.6 +/- 0:9, and dark matter haloes of mass M = 10^(11:3+0:2/-0.3) M_sun . We reassess the clustering of LBGs at z=4–6 and find a trend of increasing bias from z=3.8 (b~3.0) to z=7:2 (b~8.6). We use these measurements to infer the fraction of dark matter haloes hosting UV-bright galaxies, and find that values near unity are preferred at z=7.2, which may be explained by the shorter halo assembly time at high redshift.
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    Interacting dark matter: decay and bremsstrahlung processes
    Galea, Ahmad Jacob ( 2013)
    Though there is substantial indirect astrophysical evidence for the existence of dark matter (DM), it has yet to be directly detected. Consequently, little is known about its internal structure. It is possible that there is a small but finite non-gravitational interaction between dark matter and the Standard Model (SM) which may have observable consequences. The purpose of this thesis is the exploration of some of these interactions and consequences. In particular we consider the possibility that dark matter is unstable on long timescales, as motivated by discrepancies between simulation and observation of structure on sub-galactic scales. We also consider the consequences of electroweak radiative corrections to annihilation processes involving dark matter, as such corrections are necessarily present in many well motivated models. We consider this possibility in the contexts of dark matter annihilation in galactic halos, and production in colliders. Chapter 1 provides an introduction to dark matter, including some of its astrophysical and particle aspects. As a motivation for the following sections, we begin by briefly outlining some of the observational evidence for dark matter. We go on to discuss structure formation, and the cold dark matter distribution on galactic scales. Next we discuss the possibility of non-gravitational interactions involving dark matter, including decay, annihilation, scattering off nuclei, and production. Finally we discuss the determination of the relic abundance in the early Universe, including a discussion of models involving coannihilation. Late decaying dark matter has been proposed as a solution to the small scale structure problems inherent to cold dark matter cosmology. In these models the parent dark matter particle is unstable, and decays into a daughter with near degenerate mass, plus a relativistic final state. In Chapter 2 we review the observational constraints on decaying dark matter, and construct explicit particle physics models to realize this scenario. To achieve this, we introduce a pair of fermionic dark matter candidates and a new scalar field, which obey either a Z4, or a U(1) symmetry. Through the spontaneous breaking of these symmetries, and coupling of the new fields to standard model particles, we demonstrate that the desired decay process may be obtained. We also discuss the dark matter production processes in these models. In Chapter 3 we investigate electroweak radiative corrections to dark matter annihilation into leptons, in which a W or Z boson is also radiated. In many dark matter models the annihilation rate into fermions is helicity suppressed. We demonstrate that bremsstrahlung processes can remove this helicity suppression, causing the branching ratios Br($\ell \nu W $), Br($\ell^+\ell^-Z$), and Br($\bar\nu \nu Z$) to dominate over Br($\ell^+\ell^-$) and Br($\bar\nu \nu$). We find this effect to be most significant in the limit where the dark matter mass is nearly degenerate with the mass of the boson which mediates the annihilation process. Finally, in Chapter 4, we investigate a mono-Z process as a potential dark matter search strategy at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). In this channel a single Z boson recoils against missing transverse momentum attributed to dark matter particles, $\chi$, which escape the detector. For illustrative purposes we consider the process $q\bar{q} -> \chi\chi Z$ in a toy dark matter model, where the Z boson is emitted from either the initial state quarks, or from the internal propagator. We look for muonic decays of the Z, showing the Standard Model backgrounds to this process to be easily removable with modest selection cuts. We compare signal with Standard Model backgrounds and demonstrate that there exist regions of parameter space where the signal may be clearly visible above background in future LHC data.
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    The fundamental plane and peculiar velocities from the 6dF galaxy survey
    MAGOULAS, CHRISTINA ( 2012)
    Early-type galaxies (ellipticals and lenticulars) are observed to populate the relation known as the Fundamental Plane that links their effective radius, R_e, stellar velocity dispersion, σ, and mean surface brightness, I_e. We have measured Fundamental Plane parameters in the near-infrared J, H and K passbands for ~10^4 of the brightest early-type galaxies in the 6dF Galaxy Survey (6dFGS). We improve upon previous regression techniques used to derive the Fundamental Plane by developing a robust maximum likelihood algorithm for fitting the galaxy distribution in Fundamental Plane space with a 3D Gaussian model. We exploit this large near-infrared-selected sample of galaxies to investigate trends in the Fundamental Plane with stellar population, morphology and environment. The 6dFGS galaxies exhibit clear stellar population trends in Fundamental Plane space, with age varying most strongly orthogonal to the plane. Remarkably, none of the stellar population parameters vary along the long axis of the plane, which corresponds to luminosity density. The Fundamental Plane slopes show little variation with either morphology or environment, but the Fundamental Plane size zeropoint is systematically larger for galaxies in lower density environments and for early-type spiral bulges. We speculate that age drives all the trends with residuals about the plane through its correlation with environment, morphology and metallicity. Using the Fundamental Plane, we measure distances and peculiar velocities for ~10^4 6dFGS galaxies to form the largest and most homogeneous peculiar velocity sample to date. Using a maximum-likelihood approach, we measure the overall bulk galaxy motions from the 6dFGS velocity field for the local volume of the universe, finding broad agreement with the predicted velocity field constructed from the 2MASS Redshift Survey. The local volume out to 16 120 km/s is found to have a bulk motion of 337 km/s in the direction (l,b) = (313°±9°,14°±10°), in good agreement with the results of other recent studies. A comparison of the observed and predicted fields is used to constrain parameters relating the distribution of galaxies and matter. We obtain a redshift-space distortion parameter β = 0.29±0.06 and a bias parameter for the 6dFGS velocity sample of b = 1.69±0.36. The 6dFGS velocity field provides an independent probe of cosmological parameters defining models of large-scale structure formation. Next steps include: (i) combining the 6dFGS sample in the south with the SDSS sample in the north to obtain an all-sky velocity field; (ii) deriving additional constraints on cosmological parameters from the velocity power spectrum analysis; and (iii) comparing the Fundamental Plane distances and velocities for early-type galaxies with the Tully-Fisher distances and velocities for spiral galaxies that will be obtained with the WALLABY survey on the Australian SKA Pathfinder.
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    The broad emission line region of quasars and gravitational lensing by early-type galaxies
    Ruff, Andrea Joy ( 2012)
    This thesis has focused on predicting emission line flux ratios from the broad emission line region of quasars under different physical conditions, and measuring the dark matter fraction and total mass density slope within early-type galaxies using gravitational lensing. Quasars are the energetic cores of distant galaxies, and they reside in some of the oldest, most massive objects formed in the universe. Due to their incredible luminosity (as much as $10^5$ times greater than a typical galaxy), quasars can be observed at extremely large distances. Quasars have a unique spectrum, with bright, broad emission lines that are produced by photoionised gas that is close to the central super-massive black hole. Despite the prominence of these broad emission features, the gas physical conditions and the geometry of the emission region are poorly understood. Due to its small scale and large distance, the emission line region cannot be resolved directly — even with the most powerful telescopes — and simulations are required to understand the mechanism that produces the unique quasar spectrum. Using simulations of micro-physical processes, including photoionisation, the broad emission line flux ratios can be calculated for a range of gas densities and distances from the central black hole. Using the photoionisation code, Cloudy, hydrogen and helium line emission was over the range of possible broad emission line region conditions. The hydrogen and helium lines are of particular interest because the line emission has strong dependence on the gas number density and incident ionising flux, whilst having only a negligible dependence on several other free parameters of the model. These simulations were then used to find a set of interesting ratios that can be used to determine the limits on the upper limit on the gas number density, and outer radius of the emission region. This thesis demonstrates a new technique for determining the physical conditions of the broad line emitting gas in quasars, using optical and near-infrared hydrogen and helium emission lines. Near-infrared line ratios are advantageous, as they have a negligible dependence on the amount of internal dust. A locally optimally emitting cloud model of the broad emission line region was applied to four nearby (z $\sim$ 0.2) quasars from the Glikman et al. (2006) sample. By comparing simulated emission line ratios to measured ratios from optical and near-infrared spectroscopy, the physical conditions required to produce the observed emission lines were inferred. The model provides a good fit to three of the objects, and a fair fit to the fourth object. We find that low incident ionising fluxes ($phi <10^{18}$cm^-2 s^-1), and high gas densities (n>10^{12} cm^-3) are required to reproduce the observed line ratios. This analysis demonstrates that the use of composite spectra in photoionisation modelling is inappropriate; models must be fitted to the individual spectra of quasars. This thesis also derives properties of early-type galaxies using a joint gravitational lensing and stellar-dynamics analysis. The sample consists of 11 early-type galaxies from the Strong Lenses in the Legacy Survey (SL2S). The median deflector redshift is 0.5, making it the largest sample of intermediate redshift lenses that have been studied using a joint lensing and dynamics analysis. By combining measured redshifts and stellar velocity dispersions from Keck spectroscopy with lens models from Gavazzi et al. (2012, submitted), the total mass density slope inside the Einstein radius for each of the 11 lenses was derived. The average total density slope was found to be 2.16$\pm$0.9, with an intrinsic scatter of 0.25. The dark matter fraction for each lens within half the effective radius was also determined. The average projected dark matter mass fraction was found to be 0.42$\pm$0.08 with a scatter of 0.25 for a Salpeter initial mass function. By combining the SL2S results with those from previous studies, a mild trend in the cosmic evolution of the total mass density slope was found. This suggests that the total density profile of massive galaxies has become slightly steeper over cosmic time. If this result is confirmed by larger samples, it would indicate that either dissipative processes or off-axis major mergers play an important role in the growth of massive galaxies since a redshift of 1.