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This work examines star formation in the debris associated with collisions of dwarf and spiral galaxies. While the spectacular displays of major mergers are famous (e.g., NGC 4038/9, ``The Antennae''), equal mass galaxy mergers are relatively rare compared to minor mergers (mass ratio <0.3) Minor mergers are less energetic than

This work examines star formation in the debris associated with collisions of dwarf and spiral galaxies. While the spectacular displays of major mergers are famous (e.g., NGC 4038/9, ``The Antennae''), equal mass galaxy mergers are relatively rare compared to minor mergers (mass ratio <0.3) Minor mergers are less energetic than major mergers, but more common in the observable universe and, thus, likely played a pivotal role in the formation of most large galaxies. Centers of mergers host vigorous star formation from high gas density and turbulence and are surveyed over cosmological distances. However, the tidal debris resulting from these mergers have not been well studied. Such regions have large reservoirs of gaseous material that can be used as fuel for subsequent star formation but also have lower gas density. Tracers of star formation at the local and global scale have been examined for three tidal tails in two minor merger systems. These tracers include young star cluster populations, H-alpha, and [CII] emission. The rate of apparent star formation derived from these tracers is compared to the gas available to estimate the star formation efficiency (SFE). The Western tail of NGC 2782 formed isolated star clusters while massive star cluster complexes are found in the UGC 10214 (``The Tadpole'') and Eastern tail of NGC 2782. Due to the lack of both observable CO and [CII] emission, the observed star formation in the Western tail of NGC 2782 may have a low carbon abundance and represent only the first round of local star formation. While the Western tail has a normal SFE, the Eastern tail in the same galaxy has an low observed SFE. In contrast, the Tadpole tidal tail has a high observed star formation rate and a corresponding high SFE. The low SFE observed in the Eastern tail of NGC 2782 may be due to its origin as a splash region where localized gas heating is important. However, the other tails may be tidally formed regions where gravitational compression likely dominates and enhances the local star formation.
ContributorsKnierman, Karen A (Author) / Scowen, Paul (Thesis advisor) / Groppi, Christopher (Thesis advisor) / Mauskopf, Philip (Committee member) / Windhorst, Rogier (Committee member) / Jansen, Rolf (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2013
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Description
The Milky Way galaxy is a powerful dynamic system that is highly efficient at recycling material. Stars are born out of intergalactic gas and dust, fuse light elements into heavier elements in their cores, then upon stellar death spread material throughout the galaxy, either by diffusion of planetary nebula or

The Milky Way galaxy is a powerful dynamic system that is highly efficient at recycling material. Stars are born out of intergalactic gas and dust, fuse light elements into heavier elements in their cores, then upon stellar death spread material throughout the galaxy, either by diffusion of planetary nebula or by explosive events for high mass stars, and that gas must cool and condense to form stellar nurseries. Though the stellar lifecycle has been studied in detail, relatively little is known about the processes by which hot, diffuse gas ejected by dying stars cools and conglomerates in the interstellar medium (ISM). Much of this mystery arises because only recently have instruments with sufficient spatial and spectral resolution, sensitivity, and bandwidth become available in the terahertz (THz) frequency spectrum where these clouds peak in either thermal or line emission. In this dissertation, I will demonstrate technology advancement of instruments in this frequency regime with new characterization techniques, machining strategies, and scientific models of the spectral behavior of gas species targeted by these instruments.

I begin this work with a description of radiation pattern measurements and their use in astronomical instrument characterization. I will introduce a novel technique to measure complex (phase-sensitive) field patterns using direct detectors. I successfully demonstrate the technique with a single pixel microwave inductance detectors (MKID) experiment. I expand that work by measuring the APEX MKID (A-MKID) focal plane array of 880 pixel detectors centered at 350 GHz. In both chapters I discuss the development of an analysis pipeline to take advantage of all information provided by complex field mapping. I then discuss the design, simulation, fabrication processes, and characterization of a circular-to-rectangular waveguide transformer module integrated into a circularly symmetric feedhorn block. I conclude with a summary of this work and how to advance these technologies for future ISM studies.
ContributorsDavis, Kristina (Author) / Groppi, Christopher E (Thesis advisor) / Bowman, Judd (Committee member) / Mauskopf, Philip (Committee member) / Jellema, Willem (Committee member) / Pan, George (Committee member) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
Measurements of the response of superconducting nanowire single photon detector (SNSPD) devices to changes in various forms of input power can be used for characterization of the devices and for probing device-level physics. Two niobium nitride (NbN) superconducting nanowires developed for use as SNSPD devices are embedded as the inductive

Measurements of the response of superconducting nanowire single photon detector (SNSPD) devices to changes in various forms of input power can be used for characterization of the devices and for probing device-level physics. Two niobium nitride (NbN) superconducting nanowires developed for use as SNSPD devices are embedded as the inductive (L) component in resonant inductor/capacitor (LC) circuits coupled to a microwave transmission line. The capacitors are low loss commercial chip capacitors which limit the internal quality factor of the resonators to approximately $Qi = 170$. The resonator quality factor, approximately $Qr = 23$, is dominated by the coupling to the feedline and limits the detection bandwidth to on the order of 1MHz. In our experiments with this first generation device, we measure the response of the SNSPD devices to changes in thermal and optical power in both the time domain and the frequency domain. Additionally, we explore the non-linear response of the devices to an applied bias current. For these nanowires, we find that the band-gap energy is $\Delta_0 \approx 1.1$meV and that the density of states at the Fermi energy is $N_0 \sim 10^{10}$/eV/$\mu$m$^3$.

We present the results of experimentation with a superconducting nanowire that can be operated in two detection modes: i) as a kinetic inductance detector (KID) or ii) as a single photon detector (SPD). When operated as a KID mode in linear mode, the detectors are AC-biased with tones at their resonant frequencies of 45.85 and 91.81MHz. When operated as an SPD in Geiger mode, the resonators are DC biased through cryogenic bias tees and each photon produces a sharp voltage step followed by a ringdown signal at the resonant frequency of the detector. We show that a high AC bias in KID mode is inferior for photon counting experiments compared to operation in a DC-biased SPD mode due to the small fraction of time spent near the critical current with an AC bias. We find a photon count rate of $\Gamma_{KID} = 150~$photons/s/mA in a critically biased KID mode and a photon count rate of $\Gamma_{SPD} = 10^6~$photons/s/mA in SPD mode.

This dissertation additionally presents simulations of a DC-biased, frequency-multiplexed readout of SNSPD devices in Advanced Design System (ADS), LTspice, and Sonnet. A multiplexing factor of 100 is achievable with a total count rate of $>5$MHz. This readout could enable a 10000-pixel array for astronomy or quantum communications. Finally, we present a prototype array design based on lumped element components. An early implementation of the array is presented with 16 pixels in the frequency range of 74.9 to 161MHz. We find good agreement between simulation and experimental data in both the time domain and the frequency domain and present modifications for future versions of the array.
ContributorsSchroeder, Edward, Ph.D (Author) / Mauskopf, Philip (Thesis advisor) / Chamberlin, Ralph (Committee member) / Lindsay, Stuart (Committee member) / Newman, Nathan (Committee member) / Easson, Damien (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
This thesis contains an overview, as well as the history of optical interferometers. A new approach to interferometric measurements of stars is proposed and explored. Modern updates to the classic techniques are described along with some theoretical derivations showing why the method of single photon counting shows significant promise relative

This thesis contains an overview, as well as the history of optical interferometers. A new approach to interferometric measurements of stars is proposed and explored. Modern updates to the classic techniques are described along with some theoretical derivations showing why the method of single photon counting shows significant promise relative to the currently used amplitude interferometry.

Description of a modular intensity interferometer system using commercially available single-photon detectors is given. Calculations on the sensitivity and \emph{uv}-plane coverage using these modules mounted on existing telescopes on Kitt Peak, Arizona is presented.

Determining fundamental stellar properties is essential for testing models of stellar evolution as well as for deriving physical properties of transiting exoplanets. The proposed method shows great promise in measuring the angular size of stars. Simulations indicate that it is possible to measure stellar diameters of bright stars with AB magnitude <6 with a precision of >5% in a single night of observation.

Additionally, a description is given of a custom time-to-digital converter designed to time tag individual photons from multiple single-photon detectors with high count rate, continuous data logging, and low systematics. The instrument utilizes a tapped-delay line approach on an FPGA chip which allows for sub-clock resolution of <100 ps. The TDC is implemented on a Re-configurable Open Architecture Computing Hardware Revision 2 (ROACH2) board which allows for continuous data streaming and time tagging of up to 20 million events per second. The functioning prototype is currently set-up to work with up to ten independent channels. Laboratory characterization of the system, including RF, pick up and mitigation, as well as measurement of in-lab photon correlations from an incoherent light source (artificial star), are presented. Additional improvements to the TDC will also be discussed, such as improving the data transfer rate by a factor of 10 via an SDP+ Mezzanine card and PCIe 2SFP+ 10 Gb card, as well as scaling to 64 independent channels.

Furthermore, a modified nulling interferometer with image inversion is proposed, for direct imaging of exoplanets below the canonical Rayleigh resolution limit. Image inversion interferometry relies on splitting incoming radiation from a source, either spatially rotating or reflecting the electric field from one arm of the interferometer before recombining the signals and detecting the resulting images in the two output ports with an array of high-speed single-photon detectors. Sources of incoming radiation that have cylindrical symmetry and are centered on the rotation axis will cancel in one of the output ports and add in the other output port. The ability to suppress light from a host star, as well as the ability to resolve past the Rayleigh limit, enables sensitive detection of exoplanets from a stable environment without the need for a coronagraph. The expected number of photons and the corresponding variance in the measurement for different initial contrast ratios are shown, with some first-order theoretical instrumental errors.

Lastly, preliminary results from a sizeable photometric survey are presented. This survey is used to derive bolometric flux alongside from angular size measurements and the effective stellar temperatures.
ContributorsPilyavsky, Genady (Author) / Mauskopf, Philip (Thesis advisor) / Groppi, Christopher (Committee member) / Butler, Nathaniel (Committee member) / Bowman, Judd (Committee member) / Scowen, Paul (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2018
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Description
The following paper discusses the validation of the TolTEC optical design along with a progress report regarding the design of the optical mounting system. Solidworks and Zemax were used in conjunction to model the proposed optics designs. The final optical design was selected through extensive CAD modeling and testing within

The following paper discusses the validation of the TolTEC optical design along with a progress report regarding the design of the optical mounting system. Solidworks and Zemax were used in conjunction to model the proposed optics designs. The final optical design was selected through extensive CAD modeling and testing within the Large Millimeter Telescope receiver room. The TolTEC optics can be divided into two arrays, one comprised of the warm mirrors and the second, cryogenically-operated cold mirrors. To ensure structural stability and optical performance, the mechanical design of these systems places a heavy emphasis on rigidity. This is done using a variety of design techniques that restrict motion along the necessary degrees of freedom and maximize moment of inertia while minimizing weight. Work will resume on this project in the Fall 2017 semester.
ContributorsKelso, Rhys Partain (Author) / Mauskopf, Philip (Thesis director) / Groppi, Christopher (Committee member) / Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Program (Contributor) / Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
Created2017-05
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Description
The Kilopixel Array Pathfinder Project (KAPPa) advances the number of coherent high-frequency terahertz (THz) receivers that could be packed into a single focal plane array on existing submm telescopes. The KAPPa receiver, at 655-695 GHz, is a high frequency heterodyne receiver that can achieve system temperatures of less than 200

The Kilopixel Array Pathfinder Project (KAPPa) advances the number of coherent high-frequency terahertz (THz) receivers that could be packed into a single focal plane array on existing submm telescopes. The KAPPa receiver, at 655-695 GHz, is a high frequency heterodyne receiver that can achieve system temperatures of less than 200 K, the specification for ALMA band-9. The KAPPa receiver uses a novel design of a permanent magnet to suppress the noise generated by the DC Josephson effect. This is in stark contrast to the benchmark solution of an electromagnet that is both too expensive and too large for use in kilo-pixel arrays. I present a simple, robust design for a single receiver element that can be tessellated throughout a telescope's focal plane to make a ~1000 pixel array, which is much larger than the current state-of-the-art array, SuperCam, at 64 pixels and ~345 GHz.

While the original goal to develop receiver technologies has been accomplished, the path to this accomplishment required a far more holistic approach than originally anticipated. The goal of the present work has expended exponentially from that of KAPPas promised technical achievements. In the present work, KAPPa and its extension, I present solutions ranging from 1) the creation of large scale astronomical maps, 2) metaheuristic algorithms that solve tasks too complex for humans, and 3) detailed technical assembly of microscopic circuit components. Each part is equally integral for the realization of a ~1000 pixel THz arrays.

Our automated tuning algorithm, Alice, uses differential evolution techniques and has been extremely successful in its implementation. Alice provides good results for characterizing the extremely complex tuning topology of THz receivers. More importantly, it has accomplished rapid optimization of an entire array without human intervention. In the age of big data astronomy, I have prepared THz heterodyne receiver arrays by making cutting edge community-oriented data analysis tools for the future of large-scale discovery. I present a from-scratch reduction and analysis architecture developed for observations of 100s of square degree on-the-sky maps with SuperCam to address the gulf between observing with single dish antennas versus a truly integrated focal plane array.
ContributorsWheeler, Caleb Henry, III (Author) / Groppi, Christopher E (Thesis advisor) / Butler, Nathaniel (Committee member) / Christensen, Philip R. (Philip Russel) (Committee member) / Mauskopf, Philip (Committee member) / Scowen, Paul (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2016
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Description
Studying the interstellar medium (ISM) is the key to answering questions about how material that exists between the stars drives the evolution of galaxies. Current models for the ISM life-cycle exist, but several steps lack observational evidence. Inthis dissertation I present the work I completed in support of up-coming mission

Studying the interstellar medium (ISM) is the key to answering questions about how material that exists between the stars drives the evolution of galaxies. Current models for the ISM life-cycle exist, but several steps lack observational evidence. Inthis dissertation I present the work I completed in support of up-coming mission to further study the ISM. This work includes ancillary data analysis of the Carina Nebula for the upcoming balloon mission: astrophysics stratospheric telescope for high spectral resolution observations at submillimeter wavelengths (ASTHROS). I present a derived molecular gas map of Carina from Herschel dust continuum emission maps at wavelengths between 70-500 microns. I compare it to the distribution of atomic gas, using HI 21 cm data, and of multiple CO isotopologues for the J = 1 → 0 rotational transition. I use these data sets to separate the CO–dark and CO–bright molecular components to study their relative contribution to the total molecular gas mass budget in Carina. I studied the transition between atomic and molecular gas in this region, by deriving the molecular fraction as a function of position, and comparing it to theoretical models of this transition. I also present the flight hardware design, testing, and space qualification of the intermediate frequency (IF) harness for the galactic/extragalactic ultra long duration balloon spectroscopic terahertz observatory (GUSTO). The harness transmits signal via novel cryogenic flexible stripline based transmission lines operating from 0.3 - 6.0 GHz. I designed three sets of 8-channel ribbons with characteristic insertion loss of 3.07 dB/ft at 5 GHz while the line was at a temperature gradient between 20 K - 300 K. Missions like GUSTO make use of non-linear mixing elements to achieve down-conversion of higher frequencies into IF bands. The mixers have a temperature dependent impedance that is difficult to measure. The last chapters of this work detail my attempt to carry out in-situ vacuum cryogenic calibrations using industry standard commercial off-the-shelf calibration kits and cryogenic RF electro-mechanical latching switches. I present the complex impedance of a non-linear superconducting transmission line as measured with a cryogenic calibration.
ContributorsNeric, Marko (Author) / Groppi, Chris (Thesis advisor) / Mauskopf, Philip (Committee member) / Scowen, Paul (Committee member) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Committee member) / Jacobs, Daniel (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Millimeter astronomy unlocks a window to the earliest produced light in the universe, called the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). Through analysis of the CMB, overarching features about the universe's evolution and structure can be better understood. Modern millimeter-wave instruments are constantly seeking improvements to sensitivity in the effort

Millimeter astronomy unlocks a window to the earliest produced light in the universe, called the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB). Through analysis of the CMB, overarching features about the universe's evolution and structure can be better understood. Modern millimeter-wave instruments are constantly seeking improvements to sensitivity in the effort to further constrain small CMB anisotropies in both temperature and polarization. As a result, detailed investigations into lesser-known processes of the universe are now becoming possible. Here I present work on the millimeter-wavelength analysis of z ≈ 1 quiescent galaxy samples, whose conspicuous quenching of star formation is likely the result of active galactic nuclei (AGN) accretion onto supermassive black holes. Such AGN feedback would heat up a galaxy's surrounding circumgalactic medium (CGM). Obscured by signal from cold dust, I isolate the thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect, a CMB temperature anisotropy produced by hot ionized gas, to measure the CGM's average thermal energy and differentiate between AGN accretion models. I find a median thermal energy that best corresponds with moderate to high levels of AGN feedback. In addition, the radial profile of cold dust associated with the galaxy samples appears to be consistent with large-scale clustering of the universe. In the endeavor of increasingly efficient millimeter-wave detectors, I also describe the design process for novel multichroic dual-polarization antennas. Paired with extended hemispherical lenslets, simulations of these superconducting antennas show the potential to match or exceed performance compared to similar designs already in use. A prototype detector array, with dual-bowtie and hybrid trapezoidal antennas coupled to microwave kinetic inductance detectors (MKIDs) has been made and is under preparation to be tested in the near future. Finally, I also present my contributions to the cryogenic readout design of the Ali CMB Polarization Telescope (AliCPT), a large-scale CMB telescope geared towards searching the Northern Hemisphere sky for a unique `B-mode' polarization expected to be produced by primordial gravitational waves. Cryogenic readout is responsible for successful interfacing between room temperature electronics and sensitive detectors operating on AliCPT's sub-Kelvin temperature focal plane. The development of millimeter-wave instruments and future endeavors show great potential for the overall scientific community.
ContributorsMeinke, Jeremy (Author) / Mauskopf, Philip (Thesis advisor) / Alarcon, Ricardo (Committee member) / Scannapieco, Evan (Committee member) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2023
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Description
Kinetic Inductance Detectors (KIDs) offer highly sensitive solutions for millimeter and submillimeter wave astronomy. KIDs are superconducting detectors capable of measuring photon energy and arrival time. KIDs use the change in surface impedance of the superconductor when an incident photon is absorbed and breaks Cooper pairs in the superconducting

Kinetic Inductance Detectors (KIDs) offer highly sensitive solutions for millimeter and submillimeter wave astronomy. KIDs are superconducting detectors capable of measuring photon energy and arrival time. KIDs use the change in surface impedance of the superconductor when an incident photon is absorbed and breaks Cooper pairs in the superconducting material. This occurs when KIDs use a superconducting resonator: when a photon is incident on the inductor, the photon is absorbed and inductance increases and the resonant frequency decreases. The resonator is weakly coupled to a transmission line which naturally allows for multiplexing to allow up to thousands of detectors to be read out on one transmission line. In this thesis a KID is presented to be used at submillimeter wavelengths. I optimized a polarization-sensitive aluminum absorber for future Balloon-borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST) missions. BLAST is designed to investigate polarized interstellar dust and the role of magnetic fields on star formation. As part of the effort to develop aluminum KIDs for BLAST, I investigated the optical coupling method including different feedhorn structures and a hybrid design. I present a suite of simulations calculating the absorption efficiency of the absorber. The optimized KID is a feedhorn/waveguide coupled front-illuminated detector that achieves 70% absorption over the frequency band centered at 250um.
ContributorsChamberlin, Kathryn (Author) / Mauskopf, Philip (Thesis advisor) / Trichopoulos, Georgios (Committee member) / Zeinolabedinzadeh, Saeed (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022
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Description
As a demonstration study of low-resolution spectrophotometry, the photometric redshift estimation with narrow-band optical photometry of nine galaxy clusters is presented in this thesis. A complete data reduction process of the photometryusing up to 16 10nm wide narrow-band optical filters from 490nm − 660nm are provided. Narrow-band photometry data are

As a demonstration study of low-resolution spectrophotometry, the photometric redshift estimation with narrow-band optical photometry of nine galaxy clusters is presented in this thesis. A complete data reduction process of the photometryusing up to 16 10nm wide narrow-band optical filters from 490nm − 660nm are provided. Narrow-band photometry data are combined with broad-band photometry (SDSS/Pan-STARRS) for photometric redshift fitting. With available spectroscopic redshift data from eight of the fields, I evaluated the fitted photometric redshift results and showed that combining broad-band photometric data with narrow-band data result in improvements of factor 2-3, compared to redshift estimations from broad-band photometry alone. With 15 or 16 narrow-band data combined with SDSS (Sloan Digital Sky Survey) or Pan-STARRS1 (The Panoramic Survey Telescope and Rapid Response System) data, a Normalized Median Absolute Deviation of σNMAD ∼ 0.01−0.016 can be achieved. The multiband images of galaxy cluster ABELL 611 have been used to further study intracluster light around its brightest cluster galaxy (BCG). It can be shown here that fitting of BCG+ICL stellar properties using the averaged 1-dimensional radial profile is possible up to ∼ 100kpc within this cluster. The decreasing in age of the stellar population as a function of radius from the BCG+ICL profile, though not entirely conclusive, demonstrates possible future application of low-resolution spectrophotometry on the ICL studies. Finally, Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization, and Ices Explorer (SPHEREx) mission planning study are covered, and a methodology of visualization tool for target availability is described.
ContributorsWang, Pao-Yu (Author) / Mauskopf, Philip (Thesis advisor) / Butler, Nathaniel (Committee member) / Jansen, Rolf (Committee member) / Vachaspati, Tanmay (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2022