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The Star Planet Activity Research CubeSat (SPARCS) will be a 6U CubeSat devoted to photometric monitoring of M dwarfs in the far-ultraviolet (FUV) and near-ultraviolet (NUV) (160 and 280 nm respectively), measuring the time-dependent spectral slope, intensity and evolution of M dwarf stellar UV radiation. The delta-doped detectors baselined for SPARCS have demonstrated more than five times the in-band quantum efficiency of the detectors of GALEX. Given that red:UV photon emission from cool, low-mass stars can be million:one, UV observation of thes stars are susceptible to red light contamination. In addition to the high efficiency delta-doped detectors, SPARCS will include red-rejection filters to help minimize red leak. Even so, careful red-rejection and photometric calibration is needed. As was done for GALEX, white dwarfs are used for photometric calibration in the UV. We find that the use of white dwarfs to calibrate the observations of red stars leads to significant errors in the reported flux, due to the differences in white dwarf and red dwarf spectra. Here we discuss the planned SPARCS calibration model and the color correction, and demonstrate the importance of this correction when recording UV measurements of M stars taken by SPARCS.
The most promising method to study reionization is 21 cm tomography, which aims to map the 3D distribution of the neutral hydrogen gas using the 21 cm emission lines from the spin-flip transition of neutral hydrogen atoms. Several radio interferometers operating at frequencies below 200 MHz are conducting these experiments, but direct images of the observed fields are limited due to contamination from astrophysical foreground sources and other systematics, forcing current and upcoming analyses to be statistical.
In this dissertation, I studied one-point statistics of the 21 cm brightness temperature intensity fluctuations, focusing on how measurements from observations would be biased by different contaminations and instrumental systematics and how to mitigate them. I develop simulation tools to generate realistic mock 21 cm observations of the Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array (HERA), a new interferometer being constructed in the Karoo desert in South Africa, and perform sensitivity analysis of the telescope to one-point statistics using the mock observations. I show that HERA will be able to measure 21 cm one-point statistics with sufficient sensitivity if foreground contaminations can be sufficiently mitigated. In the presence of foreground, I develop a rolling foreground avoidance filter technique and demonstrate that it can be used to obtain noise-limited measurements with HERA. To assess these techniques on real data, I obtain measurements from the legacy data from the first season observation of the Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) and perform additional high-precision radio interferometric simulations for comparison. Through these works, I have developed new statistical tools that are complementary to the power spectrum method that is currently the central focus of the majority of analyses. In addition to confirming power spectrum detections, one-point statistics offer additional information on the distribution of the 21 cm fluctuations, which is directly linked to the astrophysics of structure formation.
Uncovering the intrinsic variability of GRBs constrains the size of the GRB emission region, and ejecta velocity, in turn provides hints on the nature of GRBs and their progenitors. We develop a novel method which ties together wavelet and structure-function analyses to measure, for the first time, the actual minimum variability timescale, Delta t_min, of GRB light curves. Implementing our technique to the largest sample of GRBs collected by Swift and Fermi instruments reveals that only less than 10% of GRBs exhibit evidence for variability on timescales below 2 ms. Investigation on various energy bands of the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM) onboard Fermi shows that the tightest constraints on progenitor radii derive from timescales obtained from the hardest energy channel of light curves (299--1000 keV). Our derivations for the minimum Lorentz factor, Gamma_min, and the minimum emission radius, R = 2c Gamma_min^2 Delta t_min / (1+z), find Gamma < 400 which imply typical emission radii R ~ 1 X 10^14 cm for long-duration GRBs and R ~ 3 X 10^13 cm for short-duration GRBs (sGRBs).
I present the Reionization and Transients InfraRed (RATIR) followup of LIGO/Virgo Gravitational-wave events especially for the G194575 trigger. I show that expanding our pipeline to search for either optical riZ or near-infrared YJH detections (3 or more bands)
should result in a false-alarm-rate ~1% (one candidate in the vast 100 deg^2 LIGO error region) and an efficiency ~90%.
I also present the results of a 5-year comprehensive SN search by the Palomar Transient Factory aimed to measure the SN rates in the local Luminous Infrared Galaxies. We find that the SN rate of the sample, 0.05 +/- 0.02 1/yr (per galaxy), is consistent with that expected from the theoretical prediction, 0.060 +/- 0.002 1/yr (per galaxy).