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Dive into the research topics where Gerard Smadja is active.

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Featured researches published by Gerard Smadja.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2002

Overview of the Nearby Supernova Factory

G. Aldering; Gilles Adam; P. Antilogus; Pierre Astier; Roland Bacon; Sébastien Bongard; C. Bonnaud; Yannick Copin; D. Hardin; D. Andy Howell; Jean-Pierre Lemmonnier; Joseph Levy; Stewart C. Loken; Peter E. Nugent; R. Pain; Arlette Pecontal; Emmanuel Pecontal; S. Perlmutter; Robert Michael Quimby; Kyan Schahmaneche; Gerard Smadja; W. Michael Wood-Vasey

The Nearby Supernova Factory (Snfactory) is an international experiment designed to lay the foundation for the next generation of cosmology experiments (such as CFHTLS, wP, SNAP and LSST) which will measure the expansion history of the Universe using Type Ia supernovae. The Snfactory will discover and obtain frequent lightcurve spectrophotometry covering 3200-10000Å for roughly 300 Type Ia supernovae at the low-redshift end of the smooth Hubble flow. The quantity, quality, breadth of galactic environments, and homogeneous nature of the Snfactory dataset will make it the premier source of calibration for the Type Ia supernova width-brightness relation and the intrinsic supernova colors used for K-correction and correction for extinction by host-galaxy dust. This dataset will also allow an extensive investigation of additional parameters which possibly influence the quality of Type Ia supernovae as cosmological probes. The Snfactory search capabilities and follow-up instrumentation include wide-field CCD imagers on two 1.2-m telescopes (via collaboration with the Near Earth Asteroid Tracking team at JPL and the QUEST team at Yale), and a two-channel integral-field-unit optical spectrograph/imager being fabricated for the University of Hawaii 2.2-m telescope. In addition to ground-based follow-up, UV spectra for a subsample of these supernovae will be obtained with HST. The pipeline to obtain, transfer via wireless and standard internet, and automatically process the search images is in operation. Software and hardware development is now underway to enable the execution of follow-up spectroscopy of supernova candidates at the Hawaii 2.2-m telescope via automated remote control of the telescope and the IFU spectrograph/imager.


Optical Design and Engineering | 2004

SNIFS: a wideband integral field spectrograph with microlens arrays

Blandine Lantz; G. Aldering; P. Antilogus; Christophe Bonnaud; L. Capoani; Alain Castera; Yannick Copin; Dominique Dubet; Emmanuel Gangler; François Hénault; J.-P. Lemonnier; Reynald Pain; Arlette Pecontal; Emmanuel Pecontal; Gerard Smadja

SNIFS is an integral field spectrograph devoted to the observation of supernovae. This instrument is today in the manufacturing phase and should be able to observe supernovae at the end of this year (2003) on the 2.2m telescope of University Hawaii. The concept of SNIFS is to split the 6” x 6” field of view into 225 samples of 0.4” x 0.4” through a microlens array. Then the spectral decomposition of each sample is imaged on a 2k x 4k CCD. In order to cover all the large spectral range with a high resolution, the spectrograph is composed of two modules, one for the blue wavelengths (320 nm to 560nm)with a resolution around 1000 at 430 nm and one for the red wavelengths (520 nm to 1 µm) with a resolution around 1300 at 760 nm. First we will present the optical design and detail the function of each optical component. Then the mechanical design will be shown with some maps of the structure. Finally the first pictures taken during the alignments will be displayed.


New Astronomy Reviews | 2004

The Nearby Supernova Factory

William Michael Wood-Vasey; Gregory Scott Aldering; Ben Lee; Stewart C. Loken; Peter E. Nugent; S. Perlmutter; J. Siegrist; Lifan Wang; P. Antilogus; P. Astier; D. Hardin; R. Pain; Yannick Copin; Gerard Smadja; E. Gangler; Alain Castera; Gilles Adam; Roland Bacon; J.-P. Lemonnier; Arlette Pecontal; E. Pecontal; Richard Kessler

The Nearby Supernova Factory (SNfactory) is an ambitious project to find and study in detail approximately 300 nearby Type Ia supernovae (SNe Ia) at redshifts 0.03 < z < 0.08. This program will provide an exceptional data set of well-studied SNe in the nearby smooth Hubble flow that can be used as calibration for the current and future programs designed to use SNe to measure the cosmological parameters. The first key ingredient for this program is a reliable supply of Hubble-flow SNe systematically discovered in unprecedented numbers using the same techniques as those used in distant SNe searches. In 2002, 35 SNe were found using our test-bed pipeline for automated SN search and discovery. The pipeline uses images from the asteroid search conducted by the Near Earth Asteroid Tracking group at JPL. Improvements in our subtraction techniques and analysis have allowed us to increase our effective SN discovery rate to {approx}12 SNe/month in 2003.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

STANDARDIZING TYPE Ia SUPERNOVA ABSOLUTE MAGNITUDES USING GAUSSIAN PROCESS DATA REGRESSION

A. G. Kim; R. C. Thomas; Gregory Scott Aldering; P. Antilogus; Cecilia R. Aragon; S. Bailey; Charles Baltay; S. Bongard; C. Buton; A. Canto; F. Cellier-Holzem; M. Childress; N. Chotard; Y. Copin; H. K. Fakhouri; E. Gangler; J. Guy; M. Kerschhaggl; M. Kowalski; J. Nordin; P. Nugent; K. Paech; R. Pain; E. Pecontal; R. Pereira; S. Perlmutter; D. Rabinowitz; M. Rigault; K. Runge; C. Saunders

We present a novel class of models for Type Ia supernova time-evolving spectral energy distributions (SEDs) and absolute magnitudes: they are each modeled as stochastic functions described by Gaussian processes. The values of the SED and absolute magnitudes are defined through well-defined regression prescriptions, so that data directly inform the models. As a proof of concept, we implement a model for synthetic photometry built from the spectrophotometric time series from the Nearby Supernova Factory. Absolute magnitudes at peak B brightness are calibrated to 0.13 mag in the g band and to as low as 0.09 mag in the z = 0.25 blueshifted i band, where the dispersion includes contributions from measurement uncertainties and peculiar velocities. The methodology can be applied to spectrophotometric time series of supernovae that span a range of redshifts to simultaneously standardize supernovae together with fitting cosmological parameters.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2006

DUNE: the Dark Universe Explorer

Alexandre Refregier; Olivier Boulade; Y. Mellier; Bruno Milliard; R. Pain; Joel Michaud; Frédéric Safa; Adam Amara; Pierre Astier; Etienne Barrelet; Emmanuel Bertin; Sebastien Boulade; C. Cara; Arnaud Claret; Laurent Georges; Robert Grange; J. Guy; Charles Koeck; Laurent Kroely; C. Magneville; N. Palanque-Delabrouille; Nicolas Regnault; Gerard Smadja; Carlo Schimd; Zhihong Sun

Understanding the nature of Dark Matter and Dark Energy is one of the most pressing issues in cosmology and fundamental physics. The purpose of the DUNE (Dark UNiverse Explorer) mission is to study these two cosmological components with high precision, using a space-based weak lensing survey as its primary science driver. Weak lensing provides a measure of the distribution of dark matter in the universe and of the impact of dark energy on the growth of structures. DUNE will also include a complementary supernovae survey to measure the expansion history of the universe, thus giving independent additional constraints on dark energy. The baseline concept consists of a 1.2m telescope with a 0.5 square degree optical CCD camera. It is designed to be fast with reduced risks and costs, and to take advantage of the synergy between ground-based and space observations. Stringent requirements for weak lensing systematics were shown to be achievable with the baseline concept. This will allow DUNE to place strong constraints on cosmological parameters, including the equation of state parameter of the dark energy and its evolution from redshift 0 to 1. DUNE is the subject of an ongoing study led by the French Space Agency (CNES), and is being proposed for ESAs Cosmic Vision programme.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1997

Performance of a small gap chamber

V Chorowicz; J.-F. Clergeau; D. Contardo; R. Haroutunian; L. Mirabito; S. Muanza; Gerard Smadja

Abstract The design of the Small Gap Chamber combines features of the MicroStrip Gas Chamber [1] and of the MicroGap Chamber [2]. It is a detector for a single coordinate read-out with the single metal layer pattern of a MSGC and the anode-cathode separation of a MGC. A polyimide layer, suitably patterned on top of the metal, ensures an insulation at the edge of the electrodes and defines the conductive areas in front of the gas. We report on the performance measured in a test beam at CERN and with an X-ray tube in the laboratory.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003

SNAP focal plane

Michael L. Lampton; Christopher J. Bebek; C. Akerlof; G. Aldering; R. Amanullah; Pierre Astier; E. Barrelet; Lars Bergström; J. Bercovitz; G. M. Bernstein; M. Bester; Alain Bonissent; C. R. Bower; W. Carithers; Eugene D. Commins; C. Day; Susana Elizabeth Deustua; R. DiGennaro; A. Ealet; Richard S. Ellis; M. Eriksson; Andrew S. Fruchter; Jean-Francois Genat; G. Goldhaber; Ariel Goobar; Donald E. Groom; Stewart E. Harris; Peter R. Harvey; Henry D. Heetderks; S. Holland

The proposed SuperNova/Acceleration Probe (SNAP) mission will have a two-meter class telescope delivering diffraction-limited images to an instrumented 0.7 square-degree field sensitive in the visible and near-infrared wavelength regime. We describe the requirements for the instrument suite and the evolution of the focal plane design to the present concept in which all the instrumentation -- visible and near-infrared imagers, spectrograph, and star guiders -- share one common focal plane.The proposed SuperNova/Acceleration Probe (SNAP) mission will have a two-meter class telescope delivering diffraction-limited images to an instrumented 0.7 square-degree field sensitive in the visible and near-infrared wavelength regime. We describe the requirements for the instrument suite and the evolution of the focal plane design to the present concept in which all the instrumentation -- visible and near-infrared imagers, spectrograph, and star guiders -- share one common focal plane.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

Euclid near-infrared spectrophotometer instrument concept at the end of the phase A study

Eric Prieto; Jérôme Amiaux; Jean-Louis Augueres; Jean Christophe Barrière; Carlotta Bonoli; F. Bortoletto; C. Cerna; Leonardo Corcione; Ludovic Duvet; A. Ealet; Bianca Garilli; P. Gondoin; Frank Grupp; Knud Jahnke; R. J. Laureijs; Sebastiano Ligori; Olivier Le Fevre; Thierry Maciaszek; Francesc Madrid; J. Martignac; Laurent Martin; G. Morgante; Y. Mellier; Tony Pamplona; Rory Holmes; R. Grange; Marco Riva; Christelle Rossin; Gregor Seidel; Gerard Smadja

The Euclid mission objective is to map the geometry of the dark Universe by investigating the distance-redshift relationship and the evolution of cosmic structures. The NISP (Near Infrared Spectro-Photometer) is one of the two Euclid instruments operating in the near-IR spectral region (0.9-2μm). The instrument is composed of: - a cold (140K) optomechanical subsystem constituted by a SiC structure, an optical assembly, a filter wheel mechanism, a grism wheel mechanism, a calibration unit and a thermal control - a detection subsystem based on a mosaic of 16 Teledyne HAWAII2RG 2.4μm. The detection subsystem is mounted on the optomechanical subsystem structure - a warm electronic subsystem (280K) composed of a data processing / detector control unit and of an instrument control unit. This presentation will describe the architecture of the instrument, the expected performance and the technological key challenges. This paper is presented on behalf of the Euclid Consortium.


UV/Optical/IR Space Telescopes: Innovative Technologies and Concepts | 2004

SNAP telescope: an update

Michael L. Lampton; Michael Sholl; Michael H. Krim; R. Besuner; C. Akerlof; G. Aldering; Rahman Amanullah; Pierre Astier; Charles Baltay; E. Barrelet; S. Basa; Christopher J. Bebek; J. Bercovitz; Lars Bergström; Gary Berstein; M. Bester; Ralph C. Bohlin; Alain Bonissent; C. R. Bower; M. Campbell; W. Carithers; Eugene D. Commins; C. Day; Susana Elizabeth Deustua; R. DiGennaro; A. Ealet; Richard S. Ellis; William Emmett; M. Eriksson; D. Fouchez

We present the baseline telescope design for the telescope for the SuperNova/Acceleration Probe (SNAP) space mission. SNAP’s purpose is to determine expansion history of the Universe by measuring the redshifts, magnitudes, and spectral classifications of thousands of supernovae with unprecedented accuracy. Discovering and measuring these supernovae demand both a wide optical field and a high sensitivity throughout the visible and near IR wavebands. We have adopted the annular-field three-mirror anastigmat (TMA) telescope configuration, whose classical aberrations (including chromatic) are zero. We show a preliminary optmechanical design that includes important features for stray light control and on-orbit adjustment and alignment of the optics. We briefly discuss stray light and tolerance issues, and present a preliminary wavefront error budget for the SNAP Telescope. We conclude by describing some of the design tasks being carried out during the current SNAP research and development phase.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2002

Wide-Field Surveys from the SNAP Mission

Alex G. Kim; C. Akerlof; G. Aldering; R. Amanullah; Pierre Astier; E. Barrelet; Christopher J. Bebek; Lars Bergström; J. Bercovitz; G. M. Bernstein; M. Bester; Alain Bonissent; C. R. Bower; W. Carithers; Eugene D. Commins; C. Day; Susana Elizabeth Deustua; R. DiGennaro; A. Ealet; Richard S. Ellis; M. Eriksson; Andrew S. Fruchter; Jean-Francois Genat; G. Goldhaber; Ariel Goobar; Donald E. Groom; Stewart E. Harris; Peter R. Harvey; Henry D. Heetderks; S. Holland

The Supernova / Acceleration Probe (SNAP) is a proposed space-borne observatory that will survey the sky with a wide-field optical/near-infrared (NIR) imager. The images produced by SNAP will have an unprecedented combination of depth, solid-angle, angular resolution, and temporal sampling. For 16 months each, two 7.5 square-degree fields will be observed every four days to a magnitude depth of AB=27.7 in each of the SNAP filters, spanning 3500-17000Å. Co-adding images over all epochs will give AB=30.3 per filter. In addition, a 300 square-degree field will be surveyed to AB=28 per filter, with no repeated temporal sampling. Although the survey strategy is tailored for supernova and weak gravitational lensing observations, the resulting data will support a broad range of auxiliary science programs.

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P. Antilogus

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Stewart C. Loken

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Richard Allen Scalzo

Australian National University

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Gregory Scott Aldering

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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Emmanuel Pecontal

École Normale Supérieure

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S. Bailey

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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