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Featured researches published by R. C. Thomas.


Physical Review D | 2016

Search for low-mass WIMPs in a 0.6 kg day exposure of the DAMIC experiment at SNOLAB

A. A. Aguilar-Arevalo; D. Torres Machado; D. Amidei; M. Sofo Haro; J. Liao; K.P. Hernández Torres; J. Tiffenberg; X. You; R. Gaior; Frederic Trillaud; A. Kavner; B. Cervantes Vergara; M. Butner; R. C. Thomas; M. Settimo; J. Estrada; B. Kilminster; K. Ramanathan; T. Schwarz; Gustavo Cancelo; J. Molina; J. Zhou; Y. Guandincerri; A. Letessier-Selvon; F. Izraelevitch; I. Lawson; J. C. D'Olivo; A. Chavarria; P. Privitera; G. Fernandez Moroni

We present results of a dark matter search performed with a 0.6 kg d exposure of the DAMIC experiment at the SNOLAB underground laboratory. We measure the energy spectrum of ionization events in the bulk silicon of charge-coupled devices down to a signal of 60 eV electron equivalent. The data are consistent with radiogenic backgrounds, and constraints on the spin-independent WIMP-nucleon elastic-scattering cross section are accordingly placed. A region of parameter space relevant to the potential signal from the CDMS-II Si experiment is excluded using the same target for the first time. This result obtained with a limited exposure demonstrates the potential to explore the low-mass WIMP region (<10  GeV c-2) with the upcoming DAMIC100, a 100 g detector currently being installed in SNOLAB.


Physical Review Letters | 2017

First Direct-Detection Constraints on eV-Scale Hidden-Photon Dark Matter with DAMIC at SNOLAB

A. A. Aguilar-Arevalo; D. Amidei; X. Bertou; M. Butner; Gustavo Cancelo; A. Castañeda Vázquez; B. Cervantes Vergara; A. Chavarria; C.R. Chavez; J. R. T. de Mello Neto; J. C. D’Olivo; J. Estrada; G. Fernandez Moroni; R. Gaior; Y. Guardincerri; K.P. Hernández Torres; F. Izraelevitch; A. Kavner; B. Kilminster; I. Lawson; A. Letessier-Selvon; J. Liao; A. Matalon; V. B. B. Mello; J. Molina; P. Privitera; K. Ramanathan; Y. Sarkis; T. Schwarz; M. Settimo

We present direct detection constraints on the absorption of hidden-photon dark matter with particle masses in the range 1.2-30  eV c^{-2} with the DAMIC experiment at SNOLAB. Under the assumption that the local dark matter is entirely constituted of hidden photons, the sensitivity to the kinetic mixing parameter κ is competitive with constraints from solar emission, reaching a minimum value of 2.2×10^{-14} at 17  eV c^{-2}. These results are the most stringent direct detection constraints on hidden-photon dark matter in the galactic halo with masses 3-12  eV c^{-2} and the first demonstration of direct experimental sensitivity to ionization signals <12  eV from dark matter interactions.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

How Many Kilonovae Can Be Found in Past, Present, and Future Survey Data Sets?

D. Scolnic; Richard Kessler; D. Brout; P. S. Cowperthwaite; Marcelle Soares-Santos; J. Annis; K. Herner; Hsiao-Wen Chen; Masao Sako; Z. Doctor; R. E. Butler; A. Palmese; H. T. Diehl; Joshua A. Frieman; Daniel E. Holz; Edo Berger; Ryan Chornock; V. A. Villar; M. Nicholl; Rahul Biswas; R. Hounsell; Ryan J. Foley; J. Metzger; A. Rest; Juan Garcia-Bellido; A. Möller; P. Nugent; T. M. C. Abbott; F. B. Abdalla; S. Allam

The discovery of a kilonova (KN) associated with the Advanced LIGO (aLIGO)/Virgo event GW170817 opens up new avenues of multi-messenger astrophysics. Here, using realistic simulations, we provide estimates of the number of KNe that could be found in data from past, present, and future surveys without a gravitational-wave trigger. For the simulation, we construct a spectral time-series model based on the DES-GW multi-band light curve from the single known KN event, and we use an average of BNS rates from past studies of 10^3 Gpc^(-3) yr^(-1), consistent with the one event found so far. Examining past and current data sets from transient surveys, the number of KNe we expect to find for ASAS-SN, SDSS, PS1, SNLS, DES, and SMT is between 0 and 0.3. We predict the number of detections per future survey to be 8.3 from ATLAS, 10.6 from ZTF, 5.5/69 from LSST (the Deep Drilling/Wide Fast Deep), and 16.0 from WFIRST. The maximum redshift of KNe discovered for each survey is z = 0.8 for WFIRST, z = 0.25 for LSST, and z = 0.04 for ZTF and ATLAS. This maximum redshift for WFIRST is well beyond the sensitivity of aLIGO and some future GW missions. For the LSST survey, we also provide contamination estimates from Type Ia and core-collapse supernovae: after light curve and template-matching requirements, we estimate a background of just two events. More broadly, we stress that future transient surveys should consider how to optimize their search strategies to improve their detection efficiency and to consider similar analyses for GW follow-up programs.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2017

DES15E2mlf: A Spectroscopically Confirmed Superluminous Supernova that Exploded 3.5 Gyr After the Big Bang

Y.-C. Pan; Ryan J. Foley; M. Smith; L. Galbany; C. B. D’Andrea; S. González-Gaitán; M. J. Jarvis; Richard Kessler; Eve Kovacs; C. Lidman; Robert C. Nichol; A. Papadopoulos; Masao Sako; M. Sullivan; T. M. C. Abbott; F. B. Abdalla; J. Annis; K. Bechtol; A. Benoit-Lévy; David J. Brooks; E. Buckley-Geer; D. L. Burke; A. Carnero Rosell; M. Carrasco Kind; J. Carretero; Francisco J. Castander; C. E. Cunha; L. N. da Costa; S. Desai; H. T. Diehl

We present the Dark Energy Survey (DES) discovery of DES15E2mlf, the most distant superluminous supernova (SLSN) spectroscopically confirmed to date. The light curves and Gemini spectroscopy of DES15E2mlf indicate that it is a Type I superluminous supernova (SLSN-I) at z = 1.861 (a lookback time of ∼10 Gyr) and peaking at MAB = −22.3 ± 0.1 mag. Given the high redshift, our data probe the rest-frame ultraviolet (1400–3500 A) properties of the SN, finding velocity of the C III feature changes by ∼5600 km s−1 over 14 d around maximum light. We find the host galaxy of DES15E2mlf has a stellar mass of 3.5+3.6 −2.4 × 109 M, which is more massive than the typical SLSN-I host galaxy.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2016

DES14X3taz: A Type I Superluminous Supernova Showing a Luminous, Rapidly Cooling Initial Pre-peak Bump

M. Smith; M. Sullivan; C. B. D'Andrea; Francisco J. Castander; Ricard Casas; S. Prajs; A. Papadopoulos; Robert C. Nichol; N. V. Karpenka; S. R. Bernard; Peter J. Brown; R. Cartier; Jeff Cooke; Chris Curtin; Tamara M. Davis; D. A. Finley; R. J. Foley; Avishay Gal-Yam; D.A. Goldstein; S. González-Gaitán; Ravi R. Gupta; D. A. Howell; C. Inserra; Richard Kessler; C. Lidman; John P. Marriner; P. Nugent; Tyler A. Pritchard; Masao Sako; S. J. Smartt

We present DES14X3taz, a new hydrogen-poor superluminous supernova (SLSN-I) discovered by the Dark Energy Survey (DES) supernova program, with additional photometric data provided by the Survey Using DECam for Superluminous Supernovae. Spectra obtained using Optical System for Imaging and low-Intermediate-Resolution Integrated Spectroscopy on the Gran Telescopio CANARIAS show DES14X3taz is an SLSN-I at z = 0.608. Multi-color photometry reveals a double-peaked light curve: a blue and relatively bright initial peak that fades rapidly prior to the slower rise of the main light curve. Our multi-color photometry allows us, for the first time, to show that the initial peak cools from 22,000 to 8000 K over 15 rest-frame days, and is faster and brighter than any published core-collapse supernova, reaching 30% of the bolometric luminosity of the main peak. No physical 56Ni-powered model can fit this initial peak. We show that a shock-cooling model followed by a magnetar driving the second phase of the light curve can adequately explain the entire light curve of DES14X3taz. Models involving the shock-cooling of extended circumstellar material at a distance of sime400


The Astrophysical Journal | 2018

Studying the Ultraviolet Spectrum of the First Spectroscopically Confirmed Supernova at Redshift Two

M. Sullivan; Robert C. Nichol; L. Galbany; C. B. D’Andrea; C. Inserra; C. Lidman; A. Rest; M. Schirmer; A. V. Filippenko; W. Zheng; S. Bradley Cenko; C. R. Angus; Peter J. Brown; Tamara M. Davis; D. A. Finley; Ryan J. Foley; S. González-Gaitán; C. P. Gutiérrez; Richard Kessler; S. E. Kuhlmann; John P. Marriner; A. Möller; Peter E. Nugent; S. Prajs; R. C. Thomas; R. C. Wolf; A. Zenteno; T. M. C. Abbott; F. B. Abdalla; S. Allam

{\text{}}{R}_{\odot }


The Astrophysical Journal | 2017

Evidence for Dynamically Driven Formation of the GW170817 Neutron Star Binary in NGC 4993

A. Palmese; W. G. Hartley; F. Tarsitano; Christopher J. Conselice; Ofer Lahav; S. Allam; J. Annis; H. Lin; Marcelle Soares-Santos; Douglas L. Tucker; D. Brout; M. Banerji; K. Bechtol; H. T. Diehl; Andrew S. Fruchter; J. García-Bellido; K. Herner; Andrew J. Levan; T. S. Li; C. Lidman; Kuntal Misra; Masao Sako; D. Scolnic; M. Smith; T. M. C. Abbott; F. B. Abdalla; A. Benoit-Lévy; E. Bertin; David J. Brooks; E. Buckley-Geer

are preferred over the cooling of shock-heated surface layers of a stellar envelope. We compare DES14X3taz to the few double-peaked SLSN-I events in the literature. Although the rise times and characteristics of these initial peaks differ, there exists the tantalizing possibility that they can be explained by one physical interpretation.


Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia | 2016

DESAlert: Enabling Real-Time Transient Follow-Up with Dark Energy Survey Data

Adriano Poci; K. Kuehn; T. D. Abbott; F. B. Abdalla; S. Allam; A. H. Bauer; A. Benoit-Lévy; E. Bertin; David J. Brooks; Peter J. Brown; E. Buckley-Geer; D. L. Burke; A. Carnero Rosell; M. Carrasco Kind; R. Covarrubias; L. N. da Costa; C. B. D’Andrea; D. L. DePoy; S. Desai; J. P. Dietrich; C. E. Cunha; T. F. Eifler; J. Estrada; August E. Evrard; A. Fausti Neto; D. A. Finley; B. Flaugher; P. Fosalba; Joshua A. Frieman; D. W. Gerdes

We present observations of DES16C2nm, the first spectroscopically confirmed hydrogen-free superluminous supernova (SLSN-I) at redshift


Physical Review D | 2017

Measurement of low energy ionization signals from Compton scattering in a charge-coupled device dark matter detector

K. Ramanathan; A. Kavner; A. Chavarria; P. Privitera; D. Amidei; T. L. Chou; A. Matalon; R. C. Thomas; J. Estrada; J. Tiffenberg; J. Molina

z\approx 2


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2010

Electromagnetic counterparts of compact object mergers powered by the radioactive decay of r-process nuclei

Brian D. Metzger; G. Martínez-Pinedo; Siva Darbha; Eliot Quataert; Almudena Arcones; D. Kasen; R. C. Thomas; Peter E. Nugent; I. V. Panov; N. T. Zinner

. DES16C2nm was discovered by the Dark Energy Survey (DES) Supernova Program, with follow-up photometric data from the Hubble Space Telescope, Gemini, and the European Southern Observatory Very Large Telescope supplementing the DES data. Spectroscopic observations confirm DES16C2nm to be at z = 1.998, and spectroscopically similar to Gaia16apd (a SLSN-I at z = 0.102), with a peak absolute magnitude of

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Masao Sako

University of Pennsylvania

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C. Lidman

Australian Astronomical Observatory

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David J. Brooks

University College London

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M. Smith

University of Southampton

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M. Sullivan

University of Southampton

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