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Featured researches published by Heather Campbell.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2014

Improved cosmological constraints from a joint analysis of the SDSS-II and SNLS supernova samples

M. Betoule; Richard Kessler; J. Guy; Jennifer J. Mosher; D. Hardin; Rahul Biswas; P. Astier; P. El-Hage; M. Konig; S. E. Kuhlmann; John P. Marriner; R. Pain; Nicolas Regnault; C. Balland; Bruce A. Bassett; Peter J. Brown; Heather Campbell; R. G. Carlberg; F. Cellier-Holzem; D. Cinabro; A. Conley; C. B. D'Andrea; D. L. DePoy; Mamoru Doi; Richard S. Ellis; S. Fabbro; A. V. Filippenko; Ryan J. Foley; Joshua A. Frieman; D. Fouchez

Aims. We present cosmological constraints from a joint analysis of type Ia supernova (SN Ia) observations obtained by the SDSS-II and SNLS collaborations. The dataset includes several low-redshift samples (z< 0.1), all three seasons from the SDSS-II (0.05 <z< 0.4), and three years from SNLS (0.2 <z< 1), and it totals 740 spectroscopically confirmed type Ia supernovae with high-quality light curves. Methods. We followed the methods and assumptions of the SNLS three-year data analysis except for the following important improvements: 1) the addition of the full SDSS-II spectroscopically-confirmed SN Ia sample in both the training of the SALT2 light-curve model and in the Hubble diagram analysis (374 SNe); 2) intercalibration of the SNLS and SDSS surveys and reduced systematic uncertainties in the photometric calibration, performed blindly with respect to the cosmology analysis; and 3) a thorough investigation of systematic errors associated with the SALT2 modeling of SN Ia light curves. Results. We produce recalibrated SN Ia light curves and associated distances for the SDSS-II and SNLS samples. The large SDSS-II sample provides an effective, independent, low-z anchor for the Hubble diagram and reduces the systematic error from calibration systematics in the low-z SN sample. For a flat ΛCDM cosmology, we find Ωm =0.295 ± 0.034 (stat+sys), a value consistent with the most recent cosmic microwave background (CMB) measurement from the Planck and WMAP experiments. Our result is 1.8σ (stat+sys) different than the previously published result of SNLS three-year data. The change is due primarily to improvements in the SNLS photometric calibration. When combined with CMB constraints, we measure a constant dark-energy equation of state parameter w =−1.018 ± 0.057 (stat+sys) for a flat universe. Adding baryon acoustic oscillation distance measurements gives similar constraints: w =−1.027 ± 0.055. Our supernova measurements provide the most stringent constraints to date on the nature of dark energy.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Galaxy Zoo: Passive Red Spirals .

Karen L. Masters; Moein Mosleh; A. Kathy Romer; Robert C. Nichol; Steven P. Bamford; Kevin Schawinski; Chris Lintott; Dan Andreescu; Heather Campbell; Ben Crowcroft; Isabelle Doyle; Edward M. Edmondson; Phil Murray; M. Jordan Raddick; Anÿze Slosar; Alexander S. Szalay; Jan Vandenberg

We study the spectroscopic properties and environments of red (or passive) spiral galaxies found by the Galaxy Zoo project. By carefully selecting face-on disc-dominated spirals, we construct a sample of truly passive discs (i.e. they are not dust reddened spirals, nor are they dominated by old stellar populations in a bulge). As such, our red spirals represent an interesting set of possible transition objects between normal blue spiral galaxies and red early types, making up ∼6 per cent of late-type spirals. We use optical images and spectra from Sloan Digital Sky Survey to investigate the physical processes which could have turned these objects red without disturbing their morphology. We find red spirals preferentially in intermediate density regimes. However, there are no obvious correlations between red spiral properties and environment suggesting that environment alone is not sufficient to determine whether a galaxy will become a red spiral. Red spirals are a very small fraction of all spirals at low masses (M★ < 1010 M⊙), but are a significant fraction of the spiral population at large stellar masses showing that massive galaxies are red independent of morphology. We confirm that as expected, red spirals have older stellar populations and less recent star formation than the main spiral population. While the presence of spiral arms suggests that a major star formation could not have ceased a long ago (not more than a few Gyr), we show that these are also not recent post-starburst objects (having had no significant star formation in the last Gyr), so star formation must have ceased gradually. Intriguingly, red spirals are roughly four times as likely than the normal spiral population to host optically identified Seyfert/low-ionization nuclear emission region (LINER; at a given stellar mass and even accounting for low-luminosity lines hidden by star formation), with most of the difference coming from the objects with LINER-like emission. We also find a curiously large optical bar fraction in the red spirals (70 ± 5 verses 27 ± 5 per cent in blue spirals) suggesting that the cessation of star formation and bar instabilities in spirals are strongly correlated. We conclude by discussing the possible origins of these red spirals. We suggest that they may represent the very oldest spiral galaxies which have already used up their reserves of gas – probably aided by strangulation or starvation, and perhaps also by the effect of bar instabilities moving material around in the disc. We provide an online table listing our full sample of red spirals along with the normal/blue spirals used for comparison.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific | 2010

Results from the Supernova Photometric Classification Challenge

Richard Kessler; Bruce A. Bassett; Pavel Belov; Vasudha Bhatnagar; Heather Campbell; A. Conley; Joshua A. Frieman; Alexandre Glazov; S. González-Gaitán; Renée Hlozek; Saurabh W. Jha; Stephen Kuhlmann; Martin Kunz; Hubert Lampeitl; Ashish A. Mahabal; James Newling; Robert C. Nichol; David Parkinson; Ninan Sajeeth Philip; Dovi Poznanski; Joseph W. Richards; Steven A. Rodney; Masao Sako; Donald P. Schneider; Maximilian D. Stritzinger; Melvin Varughese

We report results from the Supernova Photometric Classification Challenge (SNPhotCC), a publicly released mix of simulated supernovae (SNe), with types (Ia, Ibc, and II) selected in proportion to their expected rates. The simulation was realized in the griz filters of the Dark Energy Survey (DES) with realistic observing conditions (sky noise, point-spread function, and atmospheric transparency) based on years of recorded conditions at the DES site. Simulations of non-Ia-type SNe are based on spectroscopically confirmed light curves that include unpublished non-Ia samples donated from the Carnegie Supernova Project (CSP), the Supernova Legacy Survey (SNLS), and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II (SDSS-II). A spectroscopically confirmed subset was provided for training. We challenged scientists to run their classification algorithms and report a type and photo-z for each SN. Participants from 10 groups contributed 13 entries for the sample that included a host-galaxy photo-z for each SN and nine entries for the sample that had no redshift information. Several different classification strategies resulted in similar performance, and for all entries the performance was significantly better for the training subset than for the unconfirmed sample. For the spectroscopically unconfirmed subset, the entry with the highest average figure of merit for classifying SNe Ia has an efficiency of 0.96 and an SN Ia purity of 0.79. As a public resource for the future development of photometric SN classification and photo-z estimators, we have released updated simulations with improvements based on our experience from the SNPhotCC, added samples corresponding to the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) and the SDSS-II, and provided the answer keys so that developers can evaluate their own analysis.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

Cosmology with photometrically classified type Ia supernovae from the SDSS-II supernova survey

Heather Campbell; C. B. D'Andrea; Robert C. Nichol; Masao Sako; Mathew Smith; Hubert Lampeitl; Matthew D. Olmstead; Bruce A. Bassett; Rahul Biswas; Peter J. Brown; D. Cinabro; Kyle S. Dawson; Ben Dilday; Ryan J. Foley; Joshua A. Frieman; Peter Marcus Garnavich; Renée Hlozek; Saurabh W. Jha; S. E. Kuhlmann; Martin Kunz; John P. Marriner; R. Miquel; Michael W. Richmond; Adam G. Riess; Donald P. Schneider; Jesper Sollerman; Matthew A. Taylor; Gong-Bo Zhao

We present the cosmological analysis of 752 photometrically–classified Type Ia Supernovae (SNe Ia) obtained from the full Sloan Digital Sky Survey II (SDSS-II) Supernova (SN) Survey, supplemented with host–galaxy spectroscopy from the SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS). Our photometric–classification method is based on the SN typing technique of Sako et al. (2011), aided by host galaxy redshifts (0.05 < z < 0.55). SNANA simulations of our methodology estimate that we have a SN Ia typing efficiency of 70.8%, with only 3.9% contamination f rom core-collapse (non-Ia) SNe. We demonstrate that this level of contamination has no effect on our cosmological constraints. We quantify and correct for our selection effects (e.g., Malmquist bias) using simulations. When fitting


The Astrophysical Journal | 2011

Spectroscopic Properties of Star-forming Host Galaxies and Type Ia Supernova Hubble Residuals in a nearly Unbiased Sample

C. B. D'Andrea; Ravi R. Gupta; Masao Sako; Matt Morris; Robert C. Nichol; Peter J. Brown; Heather Campbell; Matthew D. Olmstead; Joshua A. Frieman; Peter Marcus Garnavich; Saurabh W. Jha; Richard Kessler; Hubert Lampeitl; John P. Marriner; Donald P. Schneider; Mathew Smith

We examine the correlation between supernova (SN) host-galaxy properties and their residuals in the Hubble diagram. We use SNe discovered during the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-II Supernova Survey, and focus on objects at a redshift of z 3σ) correlation between the Hubble Residuals of SNe Ia and the specific SFR of the host galaxy. We comment on the importance of SN/host-galaxy correlations as a source of systematic bias in future deep SN surveys.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

The XMM Cluster Survey: X‐ray analysis methodology

Edward Lloyd-Davies; A. Kathy Romer; Nicola Mehrtens; Mark Hosmer; M. Davidson; Kivanc Sabirli; Robert G. Mann; Matt Hilton; Andrew R. Liddle; Pedro T. P. Viana; Heather Campbell; Chris A. Collins; E. Naomi Dubois; Peter E. Freeman; Craig D. Harrison; Ben Hoyle; Scott T. Kay; Emma Kuwertz; Christopher J. Miller; Robert C. Nichol; Martin Sahlén; S. A. Stanford; John P. Stott

The XMM Cluster Survey (XCS) is a serendipitous search for galaxy clusters using all publicly available data in the XMM-Newton Science Archive. Its main aims are to measure cosmological parameters and trace the evolution of X-ray scaling relations. In this paper we describe the data processing methodology applied to the 5776 XMM observations used to construct the current XCS source catalogue. A total of 3675 > 4σ cluster candidates with >50 background-subtracted X-ray counts are extracted from a total non-overlapping area suitable for cluster searching of 410 deg2. Of these, 993 candidates are detected with >300 background-subtracted X-ray photon counts, and we demonstrate that robust temperature measurements can be obtained down to this count limit. We describe in detail the automated pipelines used to perform the spectral and surface brightness fitting for these candidates, as well as to estimate redshifts from the X-ray data alone. A total of 587 (122) X-ray temperatures to a typical accuracy of <40 (<10) per cent have been measured to date. We also present the methodology adopted for determining the selection function of the survey, and show that the extended source detection algorithm is robust to a range of cluster morphologies by inserting mock clusters derived from hydrodynamical simulations into real XMMimages. These tests show that the simple isothermal β-profiles is sufficient to capture the essential details of the cluster population detected in the archival XMM observations. The redshift follow-up of the XCS cluster sample is presented in a companion paper, together with a first data release of 503 optically confirmed clusters.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2011

The XMM Cluster Survey

Edward Lloyd-Davies; A. Kathy Romer; Nicola Mehrtens; Mark Hosmer; M. Davidson; Kivanc Sabirli; Robert G. Mann; Matt Hilton; Andrew R. Liddle; Pedro T. P. Viana; Heather Campbell; Chris A. Collins; E. Naomi Dubois; Peter E. Freeman; Craig D. Harrison; Ben Hoyle; Scott T. Kay; Emma Kuwertz; Christopher J. Miller; Robert C. Nichol; Martin Sahlén; S. A. Stanford; John P. Stott

The XMM Cluster Survey (XCS) is a serendipitous search for galaxy clusters using all publicly available data in the XMM-Newton Science Archive. Its main aims are to measure cosmological parameters and trace the evolution of X-ray scaling relations. In this paper we describe the data processing methodology applied to the 5776 XMM observations used to construct the current XCS source catalogue. A total of 3675 > 4σ cluster candidates with >50 background-subtracted X-ray counts are extracted from a total non-overlapping area suitable for cluster searching of 410 deg2. Of these, 993 candidates are detected with >300 background-subtracted X-ray photon counts, and we demonstrate that robust temperature measurements can be obtained down to this count limit. We describe in detail the automated pipelines used to perform the spectral and surface brightness fitting for these candidates, as well as to estimate redshifts from the X-ray data alone. A total of 587 (122) X-ray temperatures to a typical accuracy of <40 (<10) per cent have been measured to date. We also present the methodology adopted for determining the selection function of the survey, and show that the extended source detection algorithm is robust to a range of cluster morphologies by inserting mock clusters derived from hydrodynamical simulations into real XMMimages. These tests show that the simple isothermal β-profiles is sufficient to capture the essential details of the cluster population detected in the archival XMM observations. The redshift follow-up of the XCS cluster sample is presented in a companion paper, together with a first data release of 503 optically confirmed clusters.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2015

SN 2009ip at late times - an interacting transient at+2 years

M. Fraser; R. Kotak; Andrea Pastorello; A. Jerkstrand; S. J. Smartt; Ting-Wan Chen; Michael J. Childress; Gerard Gilmore; C. Inserra; E. Kankare; S. Margheim; Seppo Mattila; S. Valenti; C. Ashall; Stefano Benetti; Maria Theresa Botticella; F. E. Bauer; Heather Campbell; N. Elias-Rosa; Mathilde Fleury; Avishay Gal-Yam; S. Hachinger; D. Andrew Howell; Laurent Le Guillou; Pierre-François Leget; A. Morales-Garoffolo; J. Polshaw; Susanna Spiro; M. Sullivan; Stefan Taubenberger

We present photometric and spectroscopic observations of the interacting transient SN 2009ip taken during the 2013 and 2014 observing seasons. We characterise the photometric evolution as a steady and smooth decline in all bands, with a decline rate that is slower than expected for a solely


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The Dark Energy Survey and operations: Year 1

H. T. Diehl; Timothy M. C. Abbott; J. Annis; R. Armstrong; L. Baruah; A. Bermeo; G. M. Bernstein; E. Beynon; Claudio Bruderer; E. Buckley-Geer; Heather Campbell; D. Capozzi; M. Carter; Ricard Casas; L. Clerkin; R. Covarrubias; C. Cuhna; C. B. D'Andrea; L. N. da Costa; Ritanjan Das; D. L. DePoy; J. P. Dietrich; A. Drlica-Wagner; A. Elliott; T. F. Eifler; J. Estrada; J. Etherington; B. Flaugher; Joshua A. Frieman; A. Fausti Neto

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The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

The effect of weak lensing on distance estimates from supernovae

Mathew Smith; David Bacon; Robert C. Nichol; Heather Campbell; Chris Clarkson; Roy Maartens; C. B. D'Andrea; Bruce A. Bassett; D. Cinabro; D. A. Finley; Joshua A. Frieman; L. Galbany; Peter Marcus Garnavich; Matthew D. Olmstead; Donald P. Schneider; Charles Shapiro; Jesper Sollerman

Co-powered supernova at late phases. No further outbursts or eruptions were seen over a two year period from 2012 December until 2014 December. SN 2009ip remains brighter than its historic minimum from pre-discovery images. Spectroscopically, SN 2009ip continues to be dominated by strong, narrow (

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Bruce A. Bassett

African Institute for Mathematical Sciences

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Donald P. Schneider

Pennsylvania State University

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Masao Sako

University of Pennsylvania

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Mathew Smith

University of the Western Cape

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