Cislunar Halo Orbits and Applications to FARSIDE Lunar Radio Telescope

Description

As part of NASA’s Artemis program, NASA intends to construct the Lunar Gateway space station in a near rectilinear halo orbit (NRHO) about the L2 Lagrange point of the Earth-Moon system in the near future. Gateway will help facilitate astronaut

As part of NASA’s Artemis program, NASA intends to construct the Lunar Gateway space station in a near rectilinear halo orbit (NRHO) about the L2 Lagrange point of the Earth-Moon system in the near future. Gateway will help facilitate astronaut landings on the surface of the Moon and support numerous scientific endeavors. One of these scientific endeavors is FARSIDE. FARSIDE is a radio telescope array concept that will be deployed on the surface of the far side of the moon. Because of this, FARSIDE will require an orbiter, such as Gateway, to act as a communication relay to be able to communicate with ground stations on Earth. This thesis analyzes how the Lunar Gateway space station can assist FARSIDE with its communication with Earth and how unintentionally scattered radio signals from FARSIDE could affect the telescope’s astronomical observations. It provides insight into the optimal deployment latitude on the lunar surface for FARSIDE. The thesis first begins with a literature review of the circular restricted three body problem (CR3BP) and halo orbit calculations. This is followed by an analysis of an example halo orbit for the distance, elevation angle, and azimuth angle it has viewed from two possible sites for FARSIDE over one period of its trajectory. Using this same approach, an analysis of the Lunar Gateway’s NRHO trajectory over one year was performed along with an analysis of the scattered radio flux from ground stations on Earth and the flux leakage from Gateway. Three different possible deployment latitudes for FARSIDE were investigated: the equator, 30 degrees, and -30 degrees. The analysis in this thesis ultimately showed that a deployment latitude below the equator would be the preferable choice to maximize the visibility of Lunar Gateway from FARSIDE considering the geometry of the Lunar Gateway’s orbit.

Date Created
2023-05
Agent

Observational Studies of Emission Line Galaxies in the Near and Distant Universe

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Description
Nebular emission-lines offer a powerful tool for studying the physical properties and chemical compositions of galaxies in the near and distant universe. They are excellent tracers of star formation activity in galaxies as well as efficient probes of intergalactic medium

Nebular emission-lines offer a powerful tool for studying the physical properties and chemical compositions of galaxies in the near and distant universe. They are excellent tracers of star formation activity in galaxies as well as efficient probes of intergalactic medium in the early universe. This dissertation presents findings from three different studies of emission-line galaxies (a.k.a. line emitters) at low and high redshifts, based on imaging and spectroscopic observations. The first study explores Hα emitters at z ~ 0.6 from the Cosmic Deep And Wide Narrow-band (DAWN) survey, providing robust measurements of the Hα luminosity function (LF) and the star-formation rate density (SFRD) at z ~ 0.6. The effects of different dust-extinction corrections on the measured LF were also investigated in this study. Owing to the observing strategy employed in this survey, this study demonstrates the importance of performing deep and wide-field observations, in order to robustly constrain the entire LF. In the second study, 21 Lyman-α emitter (LAE) candidates at z ~ 7 from the Lyman-Alpha Galaxies in the Epoch of Reionization (LAGER) survey were followed up spectroscopically, using Low Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (LRIS) on the Keck telescope. 15 of these were confirmed to be LAEs, obtaining a spectroscopic confirmation success rate of ~ 80% for LAGER LAE candidates. Apart from Lyman- α, no other rest-frame ultra-violet (UV) nebular lines were detected, with a 2σ upper limit for the ratio of NV/Lyα ≲ 0.27. These confirmations help validate the neutral Hydrogen fraction estimates from LAGER, which is consistent with a fully ionized universe at z ~ 7. The final study investigated the presence of black hole/active galactic nuclei (AGN) signatures among Green Pea (GP) galaxies, using mid-infrared (MIR) observations from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) mission. 31 GPs were selected as candidate AGN based on a stringent MIR color-color diagnostic including two GPs exhibiting notable variability in the shorter two WISE bandpasses. Given that GPs are one of the best analogs of high-redshift galaxies, findings from this study suggest that AGN activity could be responsible for the hard ionizing radiation observed in some GPs, which has crucial implications on the sources likely to have contributed towards cosmic reionization.
Date Created
2022
Agent

A Photometric and Spectroscopic Analysis of the High-Energy Evolution of K Stars

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Description
The balance between relative numbers, lifetime, and habitable zone (HZ) size of K stars (0.6 – 0.9 M⊙) in comparison with M (0.08 – 0.6 M⊙) and G (0.9 – 1.1 M⊙) stars makes them candidates to host “super-habitable” planets.

The balance between relative numbers, lifetime, and habitable zone (HZ) size of K stars (0.6 – 0.9 M⊙) in comparison with M (0.08 – 0.6 M⊙) and G (0.9 – 1.1 M⊙) stars makes them candidates to host “super-habitable” planets. Understanding the high- energy radiation environment of planets around these stars is crucial, since ultraviolet (UV) and X-ray radiation may cause severe photodissociation and ionization of the atmosphere, with the potential for complete erosion. In this thesis, I present the first broad study of the UV and X-ray evolution of K stars. I first focused on Galaxy Evolution Explorer (GALEX) and Ro ̈ntgen Satellit (ROSAT) photometric UV and X-ray evolutions of K stars and compared this with the age evolution of both early- (0.35 – 0.6 M⊙) and late-M (0.08 – 0.35 M⊙) stars. I found that the fractional UV and X-ray flux from M and K stars is similar; however, the wider and farther HZs of K stars mean that there is less incident UV radiation on HZ planets. Next, I led a spectroscopic study of 41 K stars using Hubble Space Telescope Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (HST/COS) data to show that the UV line and continua emission show no decrease in flux beyond 650 Myr whereas early-M star flux declines by 150 Myr; therefore, the K star intrinsic UV flux is greater than early-M stars after this time. I suggest that this phenomenon is related to K star rotational spin-down stalling. Lastly, I revisited the GALEX and ROSAT data with newly-available distances from the Gaia mission for both K and M stars. I find that the UV flux for K stars is an order of magnitude higher for M stars at all ages and the flux in their respective HZs is similar. However, K star X-ray flux is an order of magnitude less in the HZ than for M stars. The age of decline shows a dependency on wavelength, a phenomenon which is not seen in either the early- or late-M star data. These results suggest thatK stars may not exhibit quite the advantage as HZ planet host stars as the scientific community originally thought.
Date Created
2022
Agent

A Guide to Simplified Thermal Model Construction for Cubesats

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Description
The space industry is rapidly expanding, and components are getting increasinglysmaller leading to the prominence of cubesats. Cubesats are satellites from about coffee mug size to cereal box size. The challenges of shortened timeline and smaller budgets for smaller spacecraft are also

The space industry is rapidly expanding, and components are getting increasinglysmaller leading to the prominence of cubesats. Cubesats are satellites from about coffee mug size to cereal box size. The challenges of shortened timeline and smaller budgets for smaller spacecraft are also their biggest advantages. This benefits educational missions and industry missions a like but can burden teams to be smaller or have less experience. Thermal analysis of cubesats is no exception to these burdens which is why this thesis has been written to provide a guide for conducting the thermal analysis of a cubesat using the Deployable Optical Receiver Aperture (DORA) mission as an example. Background on cubesats and their role in the space industry will be examined. The theoretical side of heat transfer necessary for conducting a thermal analysis will be explored. The DORA thermal analysis will then be conducted by constructing a thermal model in Thermal Desktop software from the ground up. Insight to assumptions for model construction to move accurately yet quickly will be detailed. Lastly, this fast and quick method will be compared to a standard finite element mesh model to show quality results can be achieved in significantly less time.
Date Created
2022
Agent

Population III Stars and Evolutionary Stellar Metallicity

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Description
Study of the early Universe is filled with many unknowns, one of which is the nature of the very first generation of stars, otherwise designated as "Population III stars". The early Universe was composed almost entirely of cold hydrogen and

Study of the early Universe is filled with many unknowns, one of which is the nature of the very first generation of stars, otherwise designated as "Population III stars". The early Universe was composed almost entirely of cold hydrogen and helium, with only trace amounts of any heavier elements. As such, these stars would have compositions very different from the stars we are able to observe today, which would in turn change how these stars functioned, as well as their lifespans. Population III stars are so old that the light they emitted has not yet reached us here on Earth. Yet we know they have to have existed, so how do we go about studying objects that we have not yet observed? And more importantly, is there a metallicity threshold at which stars begin to behave like the stars we observe today? These areas are where stellar modelling programs such as TYCHO8 and the Spanish Virtual Observatory's Theoretical Spectra Web Server (TSWS) come in. These programs allow astronomers to model the physics of Pop III stars. We can get a pretty good understanding of how these stars behaved, how long they lived, and the visual spectra they would have emitted. Such information is crucial to astronomers being able to search for remnants of these stars, and one day, the stars themselves.
Date Created
2022-05
Agent

The evolution of escaping ionizing radiation from galaxies and active galactic nuclei through cosmic time

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Description
Reionization is the phase transition of intergalactic atoms from being neutral to

becoming fully ionized. This process began ∼400 Myr after the Big Bang, when the first

stars and black holes began emitting ionizing radiation from stellar photospheres and

accretion disks. Reionization completed

Reionization is the phase transition of intergalactic atoms from being neutral to

becoming fully ionized. This process began ∼400 Myr after the Big Bang, when the first

stars and black holes began emitting ionizing radiation from stellar photospheres and

accretion disks. Reionization completed when all of the neutral matter between galaxies

became ionized ∼1 Gyr after the Big Bang, and the Universe became transparent as

it is today.

Characteristics of the galaxies that drove reionization are mostly unknown. The

physical mechanisms that create ionizing radiation inside these galaxies, and the

paths for this light to escape are even more unclear. To date, only a small fraction of

the numerous searches for this escaping light have been able to detect a faint signal

from distant galaxies, and no consensus on how Reionization was completed has been

established.

In this dissertation, I discuss the evolution of the atomic matter between galaxies

from its initially ionized state, to its current re-ionized state, potential sources of

re-ionizing energy, and the theoretical and observational status of the characteristics of

these sources. I also present new constraints on what fraction of the ionizing radiation

escapes from galaxies using Hubble Space Telescope UV imaging, theoretical models

of the stellar and accretion disk radiation, and models of the absorption of ionizing

radiation by the intergalactic medium.
Date Created
2019
Agent

Dwarf galaxies as laboratories of protogalaxy physics: canonical star formation laws at low metallicity

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Description
In the upcoming decade, powerful new astronomical facilities such as the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), the Square Kilometer Array (SKA), and ground-based 30-meter telescopes will open up the epoch of reionization to direct astronomical observation. One of the primary

In the upcoming decade, powerful new astronomical facilities such as the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), the Square Kilometer Array (SKA), and ground-based 30-meter telescopes will open up the epoch of reionization to direct astronomical observation. One of the primary tools used to understand the bulk astrophysical properties of the high-redshift universe are empirically-derived star-forming laws, which relate observed luminosity to fundamental astrophysical quantities such as star formation rate. The radio/infrared relation is one of the more mysterious of these relations: despite its somewhat uncertain astrophysical origins, this relation is extremely tight and linear, with 0.3 dex of scatter over five orders of magnitude in galaxy luminosity. The effects of primordial metallicities on canonical star-forming laws is an open question: a growing body of evidence suggests that the current empirical star forming laws may not be valid in the unenriched, metal-poor environment of the very early universe.

In the modern universe, nearby dwarf galaxies with less than 1/10th the Solar metal abundance provide an opportunity to recalibrate our star formation laws and study the astrophysics of extremely metal-deficient (XMD) environments in detail. I assemble a sample of nearby dwarf galaxies, all within 100 megaparsecs, with nebular oxygen abundances between 1/5th and 1/50th Solar. I identify the subsample of these galaxies with space-based mid- and far-infrared data, and investigate the effects of extreme metallicities on the infrared-radio relationship. For ten of these galaxies, I have acquired 40 hours of observations with the Jansky Very Large Array (JVLA). C-band (4-8 GHz) radio continuum emission is detected from all 10 of these galaxies. These represent the first radio continuum detections from seven galaxies in this sample: Leo A, UGC 4704, HS 0822+3542, SBS 0940+544, and SBS 1129+476. The radio continuum in these galaxies is strongly associated with the presence of optical H-alpha emission, with spectral slopes suggesting a mix of thermal and non-thermal sources. I use the ratio of the radio and far-infrared emission to investigate behavior of the C-band (4-8 GHz) radio/infrared relation at metallicities below 1/10th Solar.

I compare the low metallicity sample with the 4.8 GHz radio/infrared relationship from the KINGFISHER nearby galaxy sample Tabatabaei et al. 2017 and to the 1.4 GHz radio/infrared relationship from the blue compact dwarf galaxy sample of Wu et al. 2008. The infrared/radio ratio q of the low metallicity galaxies is below the average q of star forming galaxies in the modern universe. I compare these galaxies' infrared and radio luminosities to their corresponding Halpha luminosities, and find that both the infrared/Halpha and the radio/H-alpha ratios are reduced by nearly 1 dex in the low metallicity sample vs. higher metallicity galaxies; however the deficit is not straightforwardly interpreted as a metallicity effect.
Date Created
2018
Agent

Highly multiplexed superconducting detectors and readout electronics for balloon-borne and ground-based far-infrared imaging and polarimetry

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Description
This dissertation details the development of an open source, frequency domain multiplexed (FDM) readout for large-format arrays of superconducting lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors (LEKIDs). The system architecture is designed to meet the requirements of current and next generation balloon-borne and

This dissertation details the development of an open source, frequency domain multiplexed (FDM) readout for large-format arrays of superconducting lumped-element kinetic inductance detectors (LEKIDs). The system architecture is designed to meet the requirements of current and next generation balloon-borne and ground-based submillimeter (sub-mm), far-infrared (FIR) and millimeter-wave (mm-wave) astronomical cameras, whose science goals will soon drive the pixel counts of sub-mm detector arrays from the kilopixel to the megapixel regime. The in-flight performance of the readout system was verified during the summer, 2018 flight of ASI's OLIMPO balloon-borne telescope, from Svalbard, Norway. This was the first flight for both LEKID detectors and their associated readout electronics. In winter 2019/2020, the system will fly on NASA's long-duration Balloon Borne Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (BLAST-TNG), a sub-mm polarimeter which will map the polarized thermal emission from cosmic dust at 250, 350 and 500 microns (spatial resolution of 30", 41" and 59"). It is also a core system in several upcoming ground based mm-wave instruments which will soon observe at the 50 m Large Millimeter Telescope (e.g., TolTEC, SuperSpec, MUSCAT), at Sierra Negra, Mexico.

The design and verification of the FPGA firmware, software and electronics which make up the system are described in detail. Primary system requirements are derived from the science objectives of BLAST-TNG, and discussed in the context of relevant size, weight, power and cost (SWaP-C) considerations for balloon platforms. The system was used to characterize the instrumental performance of the BLAST-TNG receiver and detector arrays in the lead-up to the 2019/2020 flight attempt from McMurdo Station, Antarctica. The results of this characterization are interpreted by applying a parametric software model of a LEKID detector to the measured data in order to estimate important system parameters, including the optical efficiency, optical passbands and sensitivity.

The role that magnetic fields (B-fields) play in shaping structures on various scales in the interstellar medium is one of the central areas of research which is carried out by sub-mm/FIR observatories. The Davis-Chandrasekhar-Fermi Method (DCFM) is applied to a BLASTPol 2012 map (smoothed to 5') of the inner ~1.25 deg2 of the Carina Nebula Complex (CNC, NGC 3372) in order to estimate the strength of the B-field in the plane-of-the-sky (B-pos). The resulting map contains estimates of B-pos along several thousand sightlines through the CNC. This data analysis pipeline will be used to process maps of the CNC and other science targets which will be produced during the upcoming BLAST-TNG flight. A target selection survey of five nearby external galaxies which will be mapped during the flight is also presented.
Date Created
2019
Agent

Characterizing Low Frequency Delay Mode Contamination of the Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array

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Description
The Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array, HERA, is a radio telescope currently being built in South Africa that plans to observe the early universe, specifically the earliest period of star and galaxy formation. It plans to use a tool called

The Hydrogen Epoch of Reionization Array, HERA, is a radio telescope currently being built in South Africa that plans to observe the early universe, specifically the earliest period of star and galaxy formation. It plans to use a tool called a delay spectrum to separate signal emitted from this time from the much brighter radio foregrounds. It is the purpose of this paper to outline the method used to characterize the contamination of these delay spectra by bright emissions of radio here on Earth called radio frequency interference, RFI. The portion of the bandwidth containing the signal from the period of initial star formation was specifically examined. In order to receive usable data, the HERA commissioning team was assisted in the evaluation of the most recent data releases. On the first batch of usable data, flagging algorithms were run in order to mask all of the RFI present. A method of filling these masked values was determined, which allowed for the delay spectrum to be observed. Various methods of injecting RFI into the data were tested which portrayed the large dependence of the delay spectrum on its presence. Finally, the noise power was estimated in order to predict whether or not the limitations observed in the dynamic range were comparable to the noise floor. By examining the evolution of the delay spectrum's power as a range of noise power was introduced, there is a good amount of evidence that this limitation is in fact the noise floor. From this, we see that excision algorithms and interpolation used are capable of removing the effects of most all of the RFI contamination.
Date Created
2019-05
Agent

Correlating Galactic Magnetic Fields with Regions of Dense Star Formation using LOFAR and CALIFA

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Description
I test the hypothesis that galactic magnetic fields originate from regions of dense
star formation (Dahlem et al. 2006) by comparing maps of 120-240 MHz synchrotron emission and hydrogen alpha (Hα) emission of the tidally-interacting, edge-on, barred spiral galaxy UGC 9665.

I test the hypothesis that galactic magnetic fields originate from regions of dense
star formation (Dahlem et al. 2006) by comparing maps of 120-240 MHz synchrotron emission and hydrogen alpha (Hα) emission of the tidally-interacting, edge-on, barred spiral galaxy UGC 9665. Synchrotron emission traces magnetic field strength to a rough first order, while Hα emission traces recent massive star formation. UGC 9665 was selected because it was included in the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR) TwoMetre Sky Survey (LoTSS; Shimwell et al. (2017)) as well as the Calar Alto Legacy Integral Field Area Survey (CALIFA; Sanchez et al. (2012)). I generated vertical intensity profiles at several distances along the disk from the galactic center for synchrotron emission and Hα in order to measure how the intensity of each falls off with distance from the midplane. In addition to correlating the vertical profiles to see if there is a relationship between star formation and magnetic field strength, I fit the LOFAR vertical profiles to characteristic Gaussian and exponential functions given by Dumke et al. (1995). Fitting these equations have been shown to be good indicators of the main mode of cosmic ray transport, whether it is advection (exponential fit) or diffusion (Gaussian fit) (Heesen et al. 2016). Cosmic rays originate from supernova,
and core collapse supernovae occur in star forming regions, which also produce
advective winds, so I test the correlation between star-forming regions and advective regions as predicted by the Heesen et al. (2016) method. Similar studies should be conducted on different galaxies in the future in order to further test these hypotheses and how well LOFAR and CALIFA complement each other, which will be made possible by the full release of the LOFAR Two-Metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) (Shimwell et al. 2017).
Date Created
2019-05
Agent