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Featured researches published by S. Niemi.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

VIS: the visible imager for Euclid

Mark Cropper; Sabrina Pottinger; S. Niemi; J. Denniston; R. Cole; Magdalena B. Szafraniec; Y. Mellier; Michel Berthe; J. Martignac; C. Cara; A. M. di Giorgio; A. Sciortino; S. Paltani; L. Genolet; J.-J. Fourmand; M. Charra; P. Guttridge; B. Winter; James Endicott; Andrew D. Holland; Jason Gow; Neil J. Murray; David J. Hall; Jérôme Amiaux; R. J. Laureijs; Giuseppe Racca; Jean-Christophe Salvignol; A. Short; J. Lorenzo Alvarez; Thomas D. Kitching

Euclid-VIS is the large format visible imager for the ESA Euclid space mission in their Cosmic Vision program, scheduled for launch in 2020. Together with the near infrared imaging within the NISP instrument, it forms the basis of the weak lensing measurements of Euclid. VIS will image in a single r+i+z band from 550-900 nm over a field of view of ~0.5 deg2. By combining 4 exposures with a total of 2260 sec, VIS will reach to deeper than mAB=24.5 (10σ) for sources with extent ~0.3 arcsec. The image sampling is 0.1 arcsec. VIS will provide deep imaging with a tightly controlled and stable point spread function (PSF) over a wide survey area of 15000 deg2 to measure the cosmic shear from nearly 1.5 billion galaxies to high levels of accuracy, from which the cosmological parameters will be measured. In addition, VIS will also provide a legacy dataset with an unprecedented combination of spatial resolution, depth and area covering most of the extra-Galactic sky. Here we will present the results of the study carried out by the Euclid Consortium during the period up to the Critical Design Review.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2014

Stellar Kinematics and Structural Properties of Virgo Cluster Dwarf Early-type Galaxies from the SMAKCED Project. II. The Survey and a Systematic Analysis of Kinematic Anomalies and Asymmetries

Elisa Toloba; Puragra Guhathakurta; Reynier F. Peletier; A. Boselli; Thorsten Lisker; J. Falcón-Barroso; Joshua D. Simon; G. van de Ven; S. Paudel; Eric Emsellem; Joachim Janz; M. den Brok; J. Gorgas; Gerhard Hensler; Eija Laurikainen; S. Niemi; A. Ryś; Heikki Salo

We present spatially resolved kinematics and global stellar populations and mass-to-light ratios for a sample of 39 dwarf early-type (dE) galaxies in the Virgo cluster studied as part of the SMAKCED stellar absorption-line spectroscopy and imaging survey. This sample is representative of the early-type population in the Virgo cluster in the absolute magnitude range -19.0 < M-r < -16.0 and of all morphological subclasses found in this galaxy population. For each dE, we measure the rotation curve and velocity dispersion profile and fit an analytic function to the rotation curve. We study the significance of the departure of the rotation curve from the best-fit analytic function (poorly fit) and of the difference between the approaching and receding sides of the rotation curve (asymmetry). Our sample includes two dEs with kinematically decoupled cores that have been previously reported. We find that 62 +/- 8% (23 out of the 39) of the dEs have a significant anomaly in their rotation curve. Analysis of the images reveals photometric anomalies for most galaxies. However, there is no clear correlation between the significance of the photometric and kinematic anomalies. We measure age-sensitive (H-beta and H-gamma A) and metallicity sensitive (Fe4668 and Mgb) Lick spectral indices in the LIS-5 angstrom system. This population of galaxies exhibits a wide range of ages and metallicities; we also find that 4 dEs show clear evidence of emission partially filling in the Balmer absorption lines. Finally, we estimate the total masses and dark matter fractions of the dEs and plot them in the mass-size, themass-velocity dispersion, and the fundamental plane scaling relations. The dEs seem to be the bridge between massive early-type galaxies and dSphs, and have a median total mass within the R-e of logM(e) = 9.1 +/- 0.2 and a median dark matter fraction within the R-e of f(DM) = 46 +/- 18%. Any formation model for the dE galaxy class must account for this diversity of kinematic and photometric anomalies and stellar populations.


Experimental Astronomy | 2015

Measuring a charge-coupled device point spread function

S. Niemi; Mark Cropper; Magdalena B. Szafraniec; Thomas D. Kitching

In this paper we present the testing of a back-illuminated development Euclid Visible Instrument (VIS) Charge-Coupled Device (CCD) to measure the intrinsic CCD Point Spread Function (PSF) characteristics using a novel modelling technique. We model the optical spot projection system and the CCD273-84 PSF jointly. We fit a model using Bayesian posterior probability density function, sampling to all available data simultaneously. The generative model fitting is shown, using simulated data, to allow good parameter estimations even when these data are not well sampled. Using available spot data we characterise a CCD273-84 PSF as a function of wavelength and intensity. The CCD PSF kernel size was found to increase with increasing intensity and decreasing wavelength.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The Euclid VIS CCD detector design, development, and programme status

Alex Short; D Barry; Michel Berthe; N Boudin; Olivier Boulade; R. Cole; Mark Cropper; Ludovic Duvet; James Endicott; L. M. Gaspar Venancio; Jason Gow; P. Guttridge; David J. Hall; Andrew D. Holland; Holger Israel; Ralf Kohley; R. J. Laureijs; J. Lorenzo Alvarez; J. Martignac; J Maskell; Richard Massey; Neil J. Murray; S. Niemi; Peter J. Pool; Sabrina Pottinger; Thibaut Prod'homme; Giuseppe Racca; Jean-Christophe Salvignol; W Suske; Magdalena B. Szafraniec

The focal plane array of the Euclid VIS instrument comprises 36 large area, back-illuminated, red-enhanced CCD detectors (designated CCD 273). These CCDs were specified by the Euclid VIS instrument team in close collaboration with ESA and e2v technologies. Prototypes were fabricated and tested through an ESA pre-development activity and the contract to qualify and manufacture flight CCDs is now underway. This paper describes the CCD requirements, the design (and design drivers) for the CCD and package, the current status of the CCD production programme and a summary of key performance measurements.


Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2016

On scale-dependent cosmic shear systematic effects.

Thomas D. Kitching; Andy Taylor; Mark Cropper; Henk Hoekstra; R. K. E. Hood; Richard Massey; S. Niemi

© 2015 The Authors.In this paper, we investigate the impact that realistic scale-dependent systematic effects may have on cosmic shear tomography. We model spatially varying residual galaxy ellipticity and galaxy size variations in weak lensing measurements and propagate these through to predicted changes in the uncertainty and bias of cosmological parameters. We show that the survey strategy - whether it is regular or randomized - is an important factor in determining the impact of a systematic effect: a purely randomized survey strategy produces the smallest biases, at the expense of larger parameter uncertainties, and a very regularized survey strategy produces large biases, but unaffected uncertainties. However, by removing, or modelling, the affected scales (l-modes) in the regular cases the biases are reduced to negligible levels. We find that the integral of the systematic power spectrum is not a good metric for dark energy performance, and we advocate that systematic effects should be modelled accurately in real space, where they enter the measurement process, and their effect subsequently propagated into power spectrum contributions.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Euclid mission status

R. J. Laureijs; Giuseppe Racca; Luca Stagnaro; Jean-Christophe Salvignol; J. Lorenzo Alvarez; G. Saavedra Criado; L. M. Gaspar Venancio; A. Short; Paulo Strada; C. Colombo; Guillermo Buenadicha; John Hoar; Ralf Kohley; Roland Vavrek; Y. Mellier; Michel Berthe; Jérôme Amiaux; Mark Cropper; S. Niemi; Sabrina Pottinger; A. Ealet; Knud Jahnke; Thierry Maciaszek; F. Pasian; M. Sauvage; Stefanie Wachter; U. Israelsson; Warren Holmes; M. Seiffert; V. Cazaubiel

In June 2012, Euclid, ESAs Cosmology mission was approved for implementation. Afterwards the industrial contracts were signed for the payload module and the spacecraft prime, and the mission requirements consolidated. We present the status of the mission in the light of the design solutions adopted by the contractors. The performances of the spacecraft in its operation, the telescope assembly, the scientific instruments as well as the data-processing have been carefully budgeted to meet the demanding scientific requirements. We give an overview of the system and where necessary the key items for the interfaces between the subsystems.


Iau Symposia | 2014

Euclid space mission: a cosmological challenge for the next 15 years

R. Scaramella; A. da Silva; I. Tereno; Stefanie Wachter; S. Niemi; Lance Miller; T. Schrabback; Elisabetta Semboloni; Andy Taylor; Massimo Viola; Will J. Percival; F. Pasian; M. Sauvage; Y. Mellier; E. Maiorano; M. Maris; Richard Massey; Henk Hoekstra; T. D. Kitching; Thierry Maciaszek; L. Guzzo; Knud Jahnke; Massimo Meneghetti; Jérôme Amiaux; C. Burigana; Carolina Carvalho; Jean-Charles Cuillandre; J. Dinis; A. Derosa; P. Franzetti

Euclid is the next ESA mission devoted to cosmology. It aims at observing most of the extragalactic sky, studying both gravitational lensing and clustering over


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2017

Young, metal-enriched cores in early-type dwarf galaxies in the Virgo cluster based on colour gradients

Linda Urich; Thorsten Lisker; Joachim Janz; Glenn van de Ven; Ryan Leaman; A. Boselli; Sanjaya Paudel; Agnieszka Sybilska; Reynier F. Peletier; Mark den Brok; Gerhard Hensler; Elisa Toloba; J. Falcón-Barroso; S. Niemi

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Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 2015

Erratum: "Stellar Kinematics and Structural Properties of Virgo Cluster Dwarf Early-Type Galaxies from the SMAKCED Project. II. The Survey and a Systematic Analysis of Kinematic Anomalies and Asymmetries" (2014, ApJS, 215, 17)

Elisa Toloba; Puragra Guhathakurta; Reynier F. Peletier; A. Boselli; Thorsten Lisker; J. Falcón-Barroso; Joshua D. Simon; G. van de Ven; S. Paudel; Eric Emsellem; Joachim Janz; M. den Brok; J. Gorgas; Gerhard Hensler; Eija Laurikainen; S. Niemi; A. Ryś; Heikki Salo

15,000 square degrees. The mission is expected to be launched in year 2020 and to last six years. The sheer amount of data of different kinds, the variety of (un)known systematic effects and the complexity of measures require efforts both in sophisticated simulations and techniques of data analysis. We review the mission main characteristics, some aspects of the the survey and highlight some of the areas of interest to this meeting


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Software design for the VIS instrument onboard the Euclid mission: a multilayer approach

Emanuele Galli; A. M. di Giorgio; S. Pezzuto; S. J. Liu; Giovanni Giusi; G. Li Causi; M. Farina; Mark Cropper; J. Denniston; S. Niemi

Early-type dwarf galaxies are not simply featureless, old objects, but were found to be much more diverse, hosting substructures and a variety of stellar population properties. To explore the stellar content of faint early-type galaxies, and to investigate in particular those with recent central star formation, we study colours and colour gradients within one effective radius in optical (g-r) and near-infrared (i-H) bands for 120 Virgo cluster early types with -19 mag <

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Mark Cropper

University College London

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Reynier F. Peletier

Kapteyn Astronomical Institute

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Elisa Toloba

University of California

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A. Boselli

Aix-Marseille University

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Joachim Janz

Swinburne University of Technology

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