Archive for arXiv:2212.10351

Four New Publications at the Open Journal of Astrophysics

Posted in OJAp Papers, Open Access, The Universe and Stuff with tags , , , , , , , on July 19, 2023 by telescoper

Time for an update at the Open Journal of Astrophysics. Owing to a well-deserved holiday by a member of the OJAp team, we were unable to register DOIs and associated metadata for a couple of weeks so refrained from announcing new papers during this period while other functions of the journal continued. Anyway, this week we have caught up with the backlog of four papers, which I now present to you here, all published on 17th July 2023. These four take the count in Volume 6 (2023) up to 26 and the total published by OJAp up to 91.

In no particular order, the four papers published this week, with their overlays, are as follows. You can click on the images of the overlays to make them larger should you wish to do so.

“Large-scale power loss in ground-based CMB mapmaking” by Sigurd Naess (Oslo, Norway) and Thibaut Louis (Saclay, France). This one is a discussion of the possible biases introduced by using a data model to create sky maps of CMB temperature fluctuations and is in the folder marked Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics.

Here is a screen grab of the overlay, which includes the abstract:

 

 

You can find the officially accepted version of the paper on the arXiv here.

The primary classification for the next paper paper is Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics and its title is “”The cumulant generating function as a novel observable to cumulate weak lensing information”. The authors are Aoife Boyle (Saclay, France), Alexandre Barthelemy (LMU, Germany), Sandrine Codis (Saclay, France), Cora Uhlemann (Newcastle, UK) & Oliver Friedrich (LMU, Germany). The paper explores the use of the cumulant generating function (CGF), from which the probability density function (PDF) can be obtained, in the context of weak gravitational lensing information.

You can click on the image of the overlay to make it larger should you wish to do so. You can find the officially accepted version of the paper on the arXiv here.

Also in the folder marked Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics is the third paper “Cosmology with 6 parameters in the Stage-IV era: efficient marginalisation over nuisance parameters” by B. Hadzhiyska (Berkeley, USA), K. Wolz (Trieste, Italy), S. Azzoni (Oxford, UK; Tokyo, Japan), D. Alonso (Oxford, UK), C. García-García (Oxford, UK), J. Ruiz-Zapatero (Oxford, UK) and A. Slosar (Tokyo, Japan). This presents an efficient analytical method to speed up marginalization over nuisance parameters introduced to model systematic effects in large-scale structure data.

Here is a screen grab of the overlay which includes the abstract:

 

You can find the officially accepted version of the paper on the arXiv here.

The final paper in this quartet, also in Cosmology and Nongalactic Astrophysics, is “Modeling the Galaxy Distribution in Clusters using Halo Cores” by D. Korytov, E. Rangel, L. Bleem, N. Frontiere, S. Habib, K. Heitmann, J. Hollowed, and A. Pope (all of the Argonne National Laboratory, USA). This presents a new method to speed up numerical simulations using a method of simplifying the handling of substructure in galaxy clusters using halo ‘core-tracking’.

The overlay of this one is here:

 

You can find the officially accepted version of the paper on the arXiv here.