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Featured researches published by R. Ansari.


Nature | 1993

Evidence for gravitational microlensing by dark objects in the Galactic halo

E. Aubourg; P. Bareyre; S. Brehin; Michel Gros; Marc Lachieze-Rey; Beatrice St. Laurent; E. Lesquoy; C. Magneville; A. Milsztajn; Luciano Moscoso; F. Queinnec; J. Rich; Michel Spiro; L. Vigroux; S. Zylberajch; R. Ansari; F. Cavalier; M. Moniez; J. P. Beaulieu; R. Ferlet; Ph. Grison; A. Vidal-Madjar; J. Guibert; Olivier Moreau; F. Tajahmady; E. Maurice; L. Prevot; C. Gry

THE flat rotation curves of spiral galaxies, including our own, indicate that they are surrounded by unseen haloes of ‘dark matter’1,2. In the absence of a massive halo, stars and gas in the outer portions of a galaxy would orbit the centre more slowly, just as the outer planets in the Solar System circle the Sun more slowly than the inner ones. So far, however, there has been no direct observational evidence for the dark matter, or its characteristics. Paczyński3suggested that dark bodies in the halo of our Galaxy can be detected when they act as gravitational ‘microlenses’, amplifying the light from stars in nearby galaxies. The duration of such an event depends on the mass, distance and velocity of the dark object. We have been monitoring the brightness of three million stars in the Large Magellanic Cloud for over three years, and here report the detection of two possible microlensing events. The brightening of the stars was symmetrical in time, achromatic and not repeated during the monitoring period. The timescales of the two events are about thirty days and imply that the masses of the lensing objects lie between a few hundredths and one solar mass. The number of events observed is consistent with the number expected if the halo is dominated by objects with masses in this range.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

Cosmological constraints from Archeops

A. Benoit; Peter A. R. Ade; A. Amblard; R. Ansari; Eric Aubourg; S. Bargot; James G. Bartlett; J.-Ph. Bernard; R. S. Bhatia; A. Blanchard; J. J. Bock; A. Boscaleri; F. R. Bouchet; A. Bourrachot; P. Camus; F. Couchot; P. de Bernardis; J. Delabrouille; F.-X. Desert; O. Dore; M. Douspis; L. Dumoulin; X. Dupac; Ph. Filliatre; P. Fosalba; K. Ganga; F. Gannaway; B. Gautier; M. Giard; Y. Giraud-Héraud

We analyze the cosmological constraints that Archeops places on adiabatic cold dark matter models with passive power-law initial fluctuations. Because its angular power spectrum has small bins in l and large l coverage down to COBE scales, Archeops provides a precise determination of the first acoustic peak in terms of position at multipole l_peak=220 +- 6, height and width. An analysis of Archeops data in combination with other CMB datasets constrains the baryon content of the Universe, Omega(b)h^2 = 0.022 (+0.003,-0.004), compatible with Big-Bang nucleosynthesis and with a similar accuracy. Using cosmological priors obtainedfrom recent non-CMB data leads to yet tighter constraints on the total density, e.g. Omega(tot)=1.00 (+0.03,-0.02) using the HST determination of the Hubble constant. An excellent absolute calibration consistency is found between Archeops and other CMB experiments, as well as with the previously quoted best fit model.The spectral index n is measured to be 1.04 (+0.10,-0.12) when the optical depth to reionization, tau, is allowed to vary as a free parameter, and 0.96 (+0.03,-0.04) when tau is fixed to zero, both in good agreement with inflation.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

The cosmic microwave background anisotropy power spectrum measured by archeops

A. Benoit; Peter A. R. Ade; A. Amblard; R. Ansari; Eric Aubourg; S. Bargot; James G. Bartlett; J.-Ph. Bernard; R. S. Bhatia; A. Blanchard; J. J. Bock; A. Boscaleri; F. R. Bouchet; A. Bourrachot; P. Camus; F. Couchot; P. de Bernardis; J. Delabrouille; F.-X. Desert; O. Dore; M. Douspis; L. Dumoulin; X. Dupac; Ph. Filliatre; P. Fosalba; K. Ganga; F. Gannaway; B. Gautier; M. Giard; Y. Giraud-Héraud

We present a determination by the Archeops experiment of the angular power spectrum of the cosmic microwave background anisotropy in 16 bins over the multipole range l=15-350. Archeops was conceived as a precursor of the Planck HFI instrument by using the same optical design and the same technology for the detectors and their cooling. Archeops is a balloon-borne instrument consisting of a 1.5 m aperture diameter telescope and an array of 21 photometers maintained at ~100 mK that are operating in 4 frequency bands centered at 143, 217, 353 and 545 GHz. The data were taken during the Arctic night of February 7, 2002 after the instrument was launched by CNES from Esrange base (Sweden). The entire data cover ~ 30% of the sky.This first analysis was obtained with a small subset of the dataset using the most sensitive photometer in each CMB band (143 and 217 GHz) and 12.6% of the sky at galactic latitudes above 30 degrees where the foreground contamination is measured to be negligible. The large sky coverage and medium resolution (better than 15 arcminutes) provide for the first time a high signal-to-noise ratio determination of the power spectrum over angular scales that include both the first acoustic peak and scales probed by COBE/DMR. With a binning of Delta(l)=7 to 25 the error bars are dominated by sample variance for l below 200. A companion paper details the cosmological implications.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1998

EROS and MACHO Combined Limits on Planetary Mass Dark Matter in the Galactic Halo

C. Alcock; Robyn A. Allsman; D. Alves; R. Ansari; E. Aubourg; Tim Axelrod; P. Bareyre; J. P. Beaulieu; Andrew Cameron Becker; D. P. Bennett; S Brehin; F. Cavalier; S. Char; Kem Holland Cook; R. Ferlet; J Fernandez; Kenneth C. Freeman; Kim Griest; Ph. Grison; M. Gros; C. Gry; J Guibert; M Lachieze-Rey; B Laurent; M J Lehner; E. Lesquoy; C. Magneville; S. L. Marshall; E Maurice; A. Milsztajn

The EROS and MACHO collaborations have each published upper limits on the amount of planetary-mass dark matter in the Galactic halo obtained from gravitational microlensing searches. In this Letter, the two limits are combined to give a much stronger constraint on the abundance of low-mass MACHOs. Specifically, objects with masses 10−7 Mm10−3 M make up less than 25% of the halo dark matter for most models considered, and less than 10% of a standard spherical halo is made of MACHOs in the 3.5×10−7 MThe EROS and MACHO collaborations have each published upper limits on the amount of planetary mass dark matter in the Galactic Halo obtained from gravitational microlensing searches. In this paper the two limits are combined to give a much stronger constraint on the abundance of low mass MACHOs.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2000

Combined Analysis of the Binary Lens Caustic-crossing Event MACHO 98-SMC-1

C. Afonso; C. Alard; J. N. Albert; J. Andersen; R. Ansari; E. Aubourg; P. Bareyre; F. Bauer; J. P. Beaulieu; A. Bouquet; S. Char; X. Charlot; F. Couchot; C. Coutures; F. Derue; R. Ferlet; J. F. Glicenstein; A. Gould; David S. Graff; M. Gros; J. Haissinski; J. C. Hamilton; D. Hardin; J. de Kat; A. Kim; T. Lasserre; E. Lesquoy; C. Loup; C. Magneville; J.-B. Marquette

We fit the data for the binary lens microlensing event MACHO 98-SMC-1 from five different microlensing collaborations and find two distinct solutions characterized by binary separation d and mass ratio q: (d,q) = (0.54,0.50) and (d,q) = (3.65,0.36), where d is in units of the Einstein radius. However, the relative proper motion of the lens is very similar in the two solutions, 1.30 km s-1 kpc-1 and 1.48 km s-1 kpc-1, thus confirming that the lens is in the Small Magellanic Cloud. The close binary can be either rotating or approximately static but the wide binary must be rotating at close to its maximum allowed rate to be consistent with all the data. We measure limb-darkening coefficients for five bands ranging from I to V. As expected, these progressively decrease with rising wavelength. This is the first measurement of limb darkening for a metal-poor A star.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2004

First detection of polarization of the submillimetre diffuse galactic dust emission by Archeops

A. Benoît; Peter A. R. Ade; A. Amblard; R. Ansari; Eric Aubourg; S. Bargot; J. G. Bartlett; J.-Ph. Bernard; R. S. Bhatia; A. Blanchard; J. J. Bock; A. Boscaleri; F. R. Bouchet; A. Bourrachot; P. Camus; F. Couchot; P. de Bernardis; J. Delabrouille; F.-X. Desert; O. Doré; M. Douspis; L. Dumoulin; X. Dupac; P. Filliatre; P. Fosalba; K. Ganga; F. Gannaway; B. Gautier; M. Giard; Y. Giraud-Heraud

We present the first determination of the Galactic polarized emission at 353 GHz by Archeops. The data were taken during the Arctic night of February 7, 2002 after the balloon--borne instrument was launched by CNES from the Swedish Esrange base near Kiruna. In addition to the 143 GHz and 217 GHz frequency bands dedicated to CMB studies, Archeops had one 545 GHz and six 353 GHz bolometers mounted in three polarization sensitive pairs that were used for Galactic foreground studies. We present maps of the I, Q, U Stokes parameters over 17% of the sky and with a 13 arcmin resolution at 353 GHz (850 microns). They show a significant Galactic large scale polarized emission coherent on the longitude ranges [100, 120] and [180, 200] deg. with a degree of polarization at the level of 4-5%, in agreement with expectations from starlight polarization measurements. Some regions in the Galactic plane (Gem OB1, Cassiopeia) show an even stronger degree of polarization in the range 10-20%. Those findings provide strong evidence for a powerful grain alignment mechanism throughout the interstellar medium and a coherent magnetic field coplanar to the Galactic plane. This magnetic field pervades even some dense clouds. Extrapolated to high Galactic latitude, these results indicate that interstellar dust polarized emission is the major foreground for PLANCK-HFI CMB polarization measurement.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2003

Limits on Galactic dark matter with 5 years of EROS SMC data

C. Afonso; Julie N. L. Albert; J. Andersen; R. Ansari; E. Aubourg; P. Bareyre; J. P. Beaulieu; Guillaume Blanc; X. Charlot; Francois Couchot; C. Coutures; R. Ferlet; P. Fouque; J. F. Glicenstein; Bertrand Goldman; A. Gould; David S. Graff; M. Gros; J. Haissinski; C. Hamadache; J. de Kat; T. Lasserre; L. Leguillou; E. Lesquoy; C. Loup; C. Magneville; J.-B. Marquette; E. Maurice; A. Maury; A. Milsztajn

Five years of EROS data towards the Small Magellanic Cloud have been searched for gravitational microlensing events, using a new, more accurate method to assess the impact of stellar blending on the efficiency. Four long-duration candidates have been found which, if they are microlensing events, hint at a non-halo population of lenses. Combined with results from other EROS observation programs, this analysis yields strong limits on the amount of Galactic dark matter made of compact objects. Less than 25% of a standard halo can be composed of objects with a mass between 2 10^-7 Msol and 1 Msol at the 95% C.L.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2006

Galactic Bulge microlensing optical depth from EROS-2

C. Hamadache; L. Le Guillou; P. Tisserand; C. Afonso; J. N. Albert; J. Andersen; R. Ansari; E. Aubourg; P. Bareyre; J. P. Beaulieu; X. Charlot; C. Coutures; R. Ferlet; P. Fouque; J. F. Glicenstein; Bertrand Goldman; A. Gould; David S. Graff; M. Gros; J. Haissinski; J. de Kat; E. Lesquoy; C. Loup; C. Magneville; J.-B. Marquette; E. Maurice; A. Maury; A. Milsztajn; M. Moniez; N. Palanque-Delabrouille

We present a new EROS-2 measurement of the microlensing optical depth toward the Galactic Bulge. Light curves of


Physics Letters B | 1987

MEASUREMENT OF THE STANDARD MODEL PARAMETERS FROM A STUDY OF W AND Z BOSONS

R. Ansari; P. Bagnaia; M. Banner; R. Battiston; K. Bernlöhr; C.N. Booth; K. Borer; M. Borghini; G. Carboni; V. Cavasinni; P. Cenci; J.C. Chollet; A.G. Clark; C. Conta; F. Costantini; Pierre Darriulat; B. De Lotto; T. Del Prete; L. Di Lella; J. Dines-Hansen; K. Einsweiler; L. Fayard; Roberto Ferrari; M. Fraternali; D. Froidevaux; J.M. Gaillard; O. Gildemeister; V.G. Goggi; C. Gössling; B. Hahn

5.6\times 10^{6}


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2004

Type Ia supernova rate at a redshift of ~;0.1

G. Blanc; C. Afonso; C. Alard; J. N. Albert; G. Aldering; A. Amadon; J. Andersen; R. Ansari; E. Aubourg; C. Balland; P. Bareyre; J. P. Beaulieu; X. Charlot; A. Conley; C. Coutures; Tomas Dahlen; F. Derue; Xiaohui Fan; R. Ferlet; G. Folatelli; P. Fouque; G. Garavini; J. F. Glicenstein; Ariel Goobar; A. Gould; David S. Graff; M. Gros; J. Haissinski; C. Hamadache; D. Hardin

clump-giant stars distributed over

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C. Coutures

Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris

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E. Lesquoy

Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris

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R. Ferlet

Institut d'Astrophysique de Paris

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