Nicholas Galitzki
University of Pennsylvania
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Featured researches published by Nicholas Galitzki.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
L. M. Fissel; Peter A. R. Ade; Francesco E. Angilè; Peter Ashton; Steven J. Benton; Mark J. Devlin; B. Dober; Yasuo Fukui; Nicholas Galitzki; N. N. Gandilo; J. Klein; Andrei Korotkov; Zhi-Yun Li; Peter G. Martin; Tristan G. Matthews; Lorenzo Moncelsi; Fumitaka Nakamura; C. B. Netterfield; Giles Novak; Enzo Pascale; Frédérick Poidevin; Fabio P. Santos; G. Savini; Douglas Scott; J. A. Shariff; J. D. Soler; Nicholas Thomas; Carole Tucker; Gregory S. Tucker; Derek Ward-Thompson
We present results for Vela C obtained during the 2012 flight of the Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope for Polarimetry. We mapped polarized intensity across almost the entire extent of this giant molecular cloud, in bands centered at 250, 350, and 500 μm. In this initial paper, we show our 500 μmdata smoothed to a resolution of 2 5 (approximately 0.5 pc). We show that the mean level of the fractional polarization pand most of its spatial variations can be accounted for using an empirical three-parameter power-law fit, p μ N-0.45 S-0.60, where Nis the hydrogen column density and Sis the polarization-angle dispersion on 0.5 pc scales. The decrease of pwith increasing Sis expected because changes in the magnetic field direction within the cloud volume sampled by each measurement will lead to cancellation of polarization signals. The decrease of pwith increasing Nmight be caused by the same effect, if magnetic field disorder increases for high column density sightlines. Alternatively, the intrinsic polarization efficiency of the dust grain population might be lower for material along higher density sightlines. We find no significant correlation between Nand S. Comparison of observed submillimeter polarization maps with synthetic polarization maps derived from numerical simulations provides a promising method for testing star formation theories. Realistic simulations should allow for the possibility of variable intrinsic polarization efficiency. The measured levels of correlation among p, N, and Sprovide points of comparison between observations and simulations
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2014
Nicholas Galitzki; Peter A. R. Ade; Francesco E. Angilè; Peter Ashton; James A. Beall; D. Becker; Kristi J. Bradford; George Che; Hsiao-Mei Cho; Mark J. Devlin; B. Dober; L. M. Fissel; Yasuo Fukui; Jiansong Gao; Christopher E. Groppi; Seth Hillbrand; G. C. Hilton; J. Hubmayr; K. D. Irwin; J. Klein; Jeff Van Lanen; D. Li; Zhi-Yun Li; Nathan P. Lourie; Hamdi Mani; Peter G. Martin; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; Fumitaka Nakamura; Giles Novak; David P. Pappas
The Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope for Polarimetry (BLASTPol) was a suborbital experiment designed to map magnetic fields in order to study their role in star formation processes. BLASTPol made detailed polarization maps of a number of molecular clouds during its successful flights from Antarctica in 2010 and 2012. We present the next-generation BLASTPol instrument (BLAST-TNG) that will build off the success of the previous experiment and continue its role as a unique instrument and a test bed for new technologies. With a 16-fold increase in mapping speed, BLAST-TNG will make larger and deeper maps. Major improvements include a 2.5-m carbon fiber mirror that is 40% wider than the BLASTPol mirror and ~3000 polarization sensitive detectors. BLAST-TNG will observe in three bands at 250, 350, and 500 μm. The telescope will serve as a pathfinder project for microwave kinetic inductance detector (MKID) technology, as applied to feedhorn-coupled submillimeter detector arrays. The liquid helium cooled cryostat will have a 28-day hold time and will utilize a closed-cycle 3He refrigerator to cool the detector arrays to 270 mK. This will enable a detailed mapping of more targets with higher polarization resolution than any other submillimeter experiment to date. BLAST-TNG will also be the first balloon-borne telescope to offer shared risk observing time to the community. This paper outlines the motivation for the project and the instrumental design.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2017
Peter A. R. Ade; M. Aguilar; Y. Akiba; K. Arnold; C. Baccigalupi; D. Barron; D. Beck; Federico Bianchini; D. Boettger; J. Borrill; S. C. Chapman; Y. Chinone; Kevin D. Crowley; A. Cukierman; Rolando Dünner; M. Dobbs; A. Ducout; T. Elleflot; J. Errard; G. Fabbian; Stephen M. Feeney; Chang Feng; T. Fujino; Nicholas Galitzki; A. Gilbert; Neil Goeckner-Wald; John Groh; Grantland Hall; N. W. Halverson; T. Hamada
We report an improved measurement of the cosmic microwave background B-mode polarization power spectrum with the Polarbear experiment at 150 GHz. By adding new data collected during the second season of observations (2013–2014) to re-analyzed data from the first season (2012–2013), we have reduced twofold the band-power uncertainties. The band powers are reported over angular multipoles
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Nicholas Galitzki; Peter A. R. Ade; F. E. Angilè; S. J. Benton; Mark J. Devlin; B. Dober; L. M. Fissel; Yasuo Fukui; N. N. Gandilo; J. Klein; Andrei Korotkov; Tristan G. Matthews; Lorenzo Moncelsi; C. B. Netterfield; Giles Novak; D. Nutter; Enzo Pascale; F. Poidevin; G. Savini; D. Scott; J. A. Shariff; J. D. Soler; Carole Tucker; Gregory S. Tucker; Derek Ward-Thompson
500\leqslant {\ell }\leqslant 2100
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
N. N. Gandilo; Peter A. R. Ade; M. Amiri; F. E. Angilè; S. J. Benton; J. J. Bock; J. R. Bond; Sean Bryan; H. C. Chiang; Carlo R. Contaldi; B. P. Crill; Mark J. Devlin; B. Dober; O. Doré; M. Farhang; J. P. Filippini; L. M. Fissel; A. A. Fraisse; Yasuo Fukui; Nicholas Galitzki; A. E. Gambrel; S. R. Golwala; J. E. Gudmundsson; M. Halpern; Matthew Hasselfield; G. C. Hilton; Warren Holmes; V. V. Hristov; K. D. Irwin; W. C. Jones
, where the dominant B-mode signal is expected to be due to the gravitational lensing of E-modes. We reject the null hypothesis of no B-mode polarization at a confidence of 3.1σ including both statistical and systematic uncertainties. We test the consistency of the measured B-modes with the Λ Cold Dark Matter (ΛCDM) framework by fitting for a single lensing amplitude parameter A L relative to the Planck 2015 best-fit model prediction. We obtain
Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2017
S. Takakura; Mario Aguilar; Yoshiki Akiba; K. Arnold; C. Baccigalupi; D. Barron; Shawn Beckman; D. Boettger; J. Borrill; S. C. Chapman; Y. Chinone; A. Cukierman; A. Ducout; T. Elleflot; J. Errard; Giulio Fabbian; Takuro Fujino; Nicholas Galitzki; Neil Goeckner-Wald; N. W. Halverson; M. Hasegawa; K. Hattori; M. Hazumi; Charles Hill; Logan Howe; Y. Inoue; A. H. Jaffe; O. Jeong; D. Kaneko; Nobuhiko Katayama
{A}_{L}={0.60}_{-0.24}^{+0.26}(\mathrm{stat}{)}_{-0.04}^{+0.00}(\mathrm{inst})
Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017
J. D. Soler; Peter A. R. Ade; F. E. Angilè; Peter Ashton; Steven J. Benton; Mark J. Devlin; B. Dober; L. M. Fissel; Yasuo Fukui; Nicholas Galitzki; N. N. Gandilo; Patrick Hennebelle; J. Klein; Zhi-Yun Li; Andrei Korotkov; P. G. Martin; Tristan G. Matthews; Lorenzo Moncelsi; C. B. Netterfield; Giles Novak; Enzo Pascale; Frédérick Poidevin; Fabio P. Santos; G. Savini; D. Scott; J. A. Shariff; Nicholas Thomas; Carole Tucker; G. S. Tucker; Derek Ward-Thompson
± 0.14(foreground) ± 0.04(multi), where
Proceedings of SPIE | 2014
S. J. Benton; Peter A. R. Ade; M. Amiri; F. E. Angilè; J. J. Bock; J. R. Bond; Sean Bryan; H. C. Chiang; Carlo R. Contaldi; B. P. Crill; Mark J. Devlin; B. Dober; O. Doré; M. Farhang; J. P. Filippini; L. M. Fissel; A. A. Fraisse; Yasuo Fukui; Nicholas Galitzki; A. E. Gambrel; N. N. Gandilo; S. R. Golwala; J. E. Gudmundsson; M. Halpern; Matthew Hasselfield; G. C. Hilton; Warren Holmes; V. V. Hristov; K. D. Irwin; W. C. Jones
{A}_{L}=1
The Astrophysical Journal | 2016
N. N. Gandilo; Peter A. R. Ade; Francesco E. Angilè; Peter Ashton; Steven J. Benton; Mark J. Devlin; B. Dober; L. M. Fissel; Yasuo Fukui; Nicholas Galitzki; J. Klein; Andrei Korotkov; Zhi-Yun Li; Peter G. Martin; Tristan G. Matthews; Lorenzo Moncelsi; Fumitaka Nakamura; C. B. Netterfield; Giles Novak; Enzo Pascale; Frédérick Poidevin; Fabio P. Santos; G. Savini; Douglas Scott; J. A. Shariff; J. D. Soler; Nicholas Thomas; Carole Tucker; Gregory S. Tucker; Derek Ward-Thompson
is the fiducial ΛCDM value.
arXiv: Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics | 2018
Charles A. Hill; Sarah Marie M. Bruno; Sara M. Simon; Aamir Ali; K. Arnold; Peter Ashton; D. Barron; Sean Bryan; Y. Chinone; Gabriele Coppi; Kevin T. Crowley; A. Cukierman; Simon R. Dicker; Jo Dunkley; Giulio Fabbian; Nicholas Galitzki; Patricio A. Gallardo; J. E. Gudmundsson; J. Hubmayr; Brian Keating; Akito Kusaka; Adrian T. Lee; F. Matsuda; Philip Daniel Mauskopf; J. J. McMahon; Michael D. Niemack; Giuseppe Puglisi; Mayuri Sathyanarayana Rao; Maria Salatino; Carlos Sierra
The Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope for Polarimetry (BLASTPol) is a suborbital mapping experiment designed to study the role played by magnetic fields in the star formation process. BLASTPol uses a total power instrument and an achromatic half-wave plate to modulate the polarization signal. During its first flight from Antarctica in December 2010, BLASTPol made degree scale maps of linearly polarized dust emission from molecular clouds in three wavebands centered at 250, 350, and 500 μm. This unprecedented dataset in terms of sky coverage, with sub-arcminute resolution, allows BLASTPol to trace magnetic fields in star-forming regions at scales ranging from cores to entire molecular cloud complexes. A second long-duration flight is scheduled for December 2012.