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Doctoral Dissertations

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Full-Text Articles in Astrophysics and Astronomy

Automated Identification And Mapping Of Interesting Mineral Spectra In Crism Images, Arun M. Saranathan Mar 2024

Automated Identification And Mapping Of Interesting Mineral Spectra In Crism Images, Arun M. Saranathan

Doctoral Dissertations

The Compact Reconnaissance Imaging Spectrometer for Mars (CRISM) has proven to be an invaluable tool for the mineralogical analysis of the Martian surface. It has been crucial in identifying and mapping the spatial extents of various minerals. Primarily, the identification and mapping of these mineral spectral-shapes have been performed manually. Given the size of the CRISM image dataset, manual analysis of the full dataset would be arduous/infeasible. This dissertation attempts to address this issue by describing an (machine learning based) automated processing pipeline for CRISM data that can be used to identify and map the unique mineral signatures present in …


Toltec: A New Multichroic Imaging Polarimeter For The Large Millimeter Telescope, Nat S. Denigris Mar 2024

Toltec: A New Multichroic Imaging Polarimeter For The Large Millimeter Telescope, Nat S. Denigris

Doctoral Dissertations

The TolTEC camera is a new millimeter-wave imaging polarimeter designed to fill the focal plane of the 50-m diameter Large Millimeter Telescope (LMT). Combined with the LMT, TolTEC offers high angular resolution (5", 6.3", 9.5") for simultaneous, polarization-sensitive observations in its three wavelength bands: 1.1, 1.4, and 2.0 mm. Additionally, TolTEC is designed to reach groundbreaking mapping speeds in excess of 1 deg2/mJy2/hr, which will enable the completion of deep surveys of large-scale structure, galaxy evolution, and star formation that are currently limited when considering practical observation times for other ground-based observatories. This thesis covers the …


Probing The Physical Mechanisms Responsible For Brown Dwarf And Giant Planet Formation, Sarah Betti Nov 2023

Probing The Physical Mechanisms Responsible For Brown Dwarf And Giant Planet Formation, Sarah Betti

Doctoral Dissertations

The disks that form around young stellar objects provide the essential material for their continued growth as well as the formation of planets, making them ideal laboratories to investigate the mechanisms and environments key for substellar and planetary formation. In this dissertation, I explore two main formation processes: the transportation of water necessary for giant planet formation, and the accretion and growth of young brown dwarfs. First, I study the water ice content in the circumstellar disk of AB Aurigae, a young Herbig Ae star. I detect and map icy grains on the disk surface using high contrast observations taken …


The Coeval Mass Assembly Of The Universe Via Supermassive Black Hole Accretion And Star Formation In Galaxies, Alyssa Sokol Apr 2023

The Coeval Mass Assembly Of The Universe Via Supermassive Black Hole Accretion And Star Formation In Galaxies, Alyssa Sokol

Doctoral Dissertations

The possible co-evolution between galaxies and their central supermassive black holes is supported by the similarity in shape between the Star Formation Rate Density (SFRD) and Black Hole Accretion Rate Density (BHARD) out to z$\sim$ 3. This apparent connection between BH growth and star formation is only established globally; while both trends peak at z$\sim$ 2, the amount of stellar and black hole mass assembly occurring within the same galaxies is unknown. Computing these trends for the same galaxies will mitigate the present sample mismatch and can be accomplished with an IR-selected sample; however, the approach relies on a robust …


Dissecting The Most Extreme Starburst Events In The Universe With Gravitational Lensing, Patrick S. Kamienski Apr 2023

Dissecting The Most Extreme Starburst Events In The Universe With Gravitational Lensing, Patrick S. Kamienski

Doctoral Dissertations

Three billions years after the Big Bang, the rate at which galaxies in the Universe were forming stars was at its peak. Colloquially known as Cosmic Noon, this epoch (redshift z ~ 2) is crucial to our understanding of how galaxies evolve with time. Dusty star-forming galaxies (DSFGs) offer important clues to such fueling and quenching of star formation. With extreme infrared luminosities (1012 − 1014 solar luminosities), their inferred star formation rates are 100−10000 solar masses per year. Yet, the physical mechanisms by which they fuel this short-lived maximal starburst phase remain poorly understood. With this dissertation, …


How Do Galaxies Form Their Stars Over Cosmic Time?, Jed H. Mckinney Oct 2022

How Do Galaxies Form Their Stars Over Cosmic Time?, Jed H. Mckinney

Doctoral Dissertations

Galaxies in the past were forming more stars than those today, but the driving force behind this increase in activity remains uncertain. In this thesis I explore the origin of high star-formation rates today and in the past by studying the properties of gas and dust in the cold interstellar medium (ISM) of dusty galaxies over cosmic time. Critically, we do not yet understand how these galaxies could form so many stars. This work began with my discovery of unusual infrared (IR) emission line ratios in the class of dusty galaxies where most of the Universe’s stars were formed. To …


Hyperspectral Unmixing: A Theoretical Aspect And Applications To Crism Data Processing, Yuki Itoh Oct 2022

Hyperspectral Unmixing: A Theoretical Aspect And Applications To Crism Data Processing, Yuki Itoh

Doctoral Dissertations

Hyperspectral imaging has been deployed in earth and planetary remote sensing, and has contributed the development of new methods for monitoring the earth environment and new discoveries in planetary science. It has given scientists and engineers a new way to observe the surface of earth and planetary bodies by measuring the spectroscopic spectrum at a pixel scale. Hyperspectal images require complex processing before practical use. One of the important goals of hyperspectral imaging is to obtain the images of reflectance spectrum. A raw image obtained by hyperspectral remote sensing usually undergoes conversion to a physical quantity representing the intensity of …


Calibration Of The Lux-Zeplin Dual-Phase Xenon Time Projection Chamber With Internally Injected Radioisotopes, Christopher D. Nedlik Jun 2022

Calibration Of The Lux-Zeplin Dual-Phase Xenon Time Projection Chamber With Internally Injected Radioisotopes, Christopher D. Nedlik

Doctoral Dissertations

Self-shielding in ton-scale liquid xenon (LXe) detectors presents a unique challenge for calibrating detector response to interactions in the detector's innermost volume. Calibration radioisotopes must be injected directly into the LXe to reach the central volume, where they must either decay away with a short half life or be purified out. We present an overview of, and results from, the prototype source injection system (SIS) developed at the University of Massachusetts Amherst for the LUX-ZEPLIN experiment (LZ). The SIS is designed to refine techniques for the injection and removal of precise activities of various calibration radioisotopes that are useful in …


A New Galactic Wind Model For Cosmological Simulations, Shuiyao Huang Feb 2022

A New Galactic Wind Model For Cosmological Simulations, Shuiyao Huang

Doctoral Dissertations

The propagation and evolution of cold galactic winds in galactic haloes is crucial to galaxy formation models. However, modelling of this process in hydrodynamic simulations of galaxy formation is over-simplified owing to a lack of numerical resolution and often neglects critical physical processes such as hydrodynamic instabilities and thermal conduction. In this thesis, I propose an analytic model, Physically Evolved Winds (PhEW), that calculates the evolution of individual clouds moving supersonically through a uniform ambient medium. The model reproduces predictions from very high resolution cloud-crushing simulations that include isotropic thermal conduction over a wide range of physical conditions. I also …


Phenomenology Of Fermion Production During Axion Inflation, Michael Roberts Apr 2021

Phenomenology Of Fermion Production During Axion Inflation, Michael Roberts

Doctoral Dissertations

We study the production of fermions through a derivative coupling to an axion inflaton and the effects of the produced fermions on the scalar and tensor metric perturbations. We show how such a coupling can arise naturally from supergravity with an axion-like field driving large-field inflation and small instanton-like corrections. We present analytic results for the scalar and tensor power spectra, and estimate the amplitude of the non-Gaussianties in the equilateral regime. The scalar spectrum is found to have a red-tilted spectral index, small non-Gaussianities, and can be dominant over the vacuum contribution. In contrast, the tensor power spectrum from …


Observational Studies Of Fragmentation In Molecular Clouds, Riwaj Pokhrel Oct 2019

Observational Studies Of Fragmentation In Molecular Clouds, Riwaj Pokhrel

Doctoral Dissertations

In this dissertation, I explore fragmentation physics in multiple scales in nearby molecular clouds and discuss some implications of fragmentation for cloud structure formation and star formation, primarily by analyzing multi-wavelength observations of dust emission. First, I tested the complete thermal and combined thermal and nonthermal support mechanisms that balance gravitational contraction at multiple scales in the Perseus molecular cloud. I found that the observed multiscale structures in Perseus are consistent with an inefficient thermal Jeans fragmentation, where the Jeans efficiency increases from the largest scale ($\gtrsim$10s of pc) to the smallest scale ($\sim$10s of AU). Next, I studied the …


The Impact Of Protostellar Feedback On Astrochemistry, Brandt Gaches Oct 2019

The Impact Of Protostellar Feedback On Astrochemistry, Brandt Gaches

Doctoral Dissertations

Star formation is the lynch pin that lies in between the scales of galaxy and planet formation. Observational studies of molecular clouds, the sites of star formation, primarly use molecular line emission, providing dynamical and chemical information. Two of the key parameters of astrochemical models are far-ultraviolet (FUV) flux and the cosmic ray ionization rate. We use analytic accretion histories to predict the bolometric and FUV luminosities of protostar clusters and compare different histories with observed bolometric luminosities. We find that the Tapered Turbulent Core model best represents the observed luminosities and their dispersion. We extend the models to calculate …


The Bivariate Luminosity-Hi Distribution Function Of Galaxies, Zhon Butcher Oct 2019

The Bivariate Luminosity-Hi Distribution Function Of Galaxies, Zhon Butcher

Doctoral Dissertations

To investigate the correlation between optical luminosity and Hi mass, we obtained 21cm Hi line observations from the 100m class Nanç ay Radio Telescope of 2600 galaxies in the local universe (900 ≤ cz ≤ 12000 km s−1 ). We first present the observations and basic results of the Nanc¸ay Interstellar Baryons Legacy Extragalactic Survey (NIBLES), followed by Arecibo follow-up Hi line observations of 305 Nanç ay Hi undetected galaxies. Analysis of the low-luminosity follow-up sources indicates that they may have, on average, a more concentrated stellar mass distribution than the Nanc¸ay detected galaxies of corresponding luminosity. Using the data …


Aztec Survey Of The Central Molecular Zone: Modeling Dust Seds With Hierarchical Bayesian Analysis, Yuping Tang Jul 2019

Aztec Survey Of The Central Molecular Zone: Modeling Dust Seds With Hierarchical Bayesian Analysis, Yuping Tang

Doctoral Dissertations

In this dissertation, we present a study based on the AzTEC/Large Millimeter Telescope (LMT) survey of dust continuum at 1.1mm on the central 200 parsecs (The Central Molecular Zone (CMZ)) of our Galaxy. Owing to its unusually high gas density and turbulence, strong magnetic field, and high cosmic ray flux, the CMZ represents an initial condition for star-formation typical of starburst galaxies in the distant universe. In order to understand dust properties in such an extreme environment. We perform a joint SED analysis of existing dust continuum surveys on the CMZ, from a wavelength of 160 μm to 1.1 mm. …


The Non-Linear Dynamics Of Barred Galaxy Evolution In Lcdm, Michael Petersen Mar 2019

The Non-Linear Dynamics Of Barred Galaxy Evolution In Lcdm, Michael Petersen

Doctoral Dissertations

The study of barred galaxy dynamics has had many successes explaining observed phenomena in barred galaxies both locally and distant, including our own Milky Way, a barred galaxy. However, the majority of this knowledge arises from either (a) analytic linear theory, which by definition cannot inform nonlinear processes, or (b) simulations which are subject to an unconstrained host of evolutionary mechanisms, including `real' dynamical processes and `artificial' numerical processes, and are thus difficult to interpret. This work chooses a path which attempts to take the best of both techniques, employing n-body simulations in the Lambda cold dark matter paradigm designed …


Probing Galaxy Evolution Through Deep Radio Continuum Observations, Hansung Gim Nov 2018

Probing Galaxy Evolution Through Deep Radio Continuum Observations, Hansung Gim

Doctoral Dissertations

One of the most important questions in modern astrophysics is how galaxies form and evolve. There are numerous processes involved in galaxy evolution, but the stellar mass buildup and supermassive black hole growth are two main drivers in galaxy evolution. Those activities are heavily obscured by dust, so we need another tracer without dust attenuation: low-frequency radio continuum observation. We understand the galaxy evolution through the deep radio continuum observations on the Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey (GOODS)-North, -South, and the COSMOS HI Large Extragalactic Survey (CHILES) fields. Exploiting the multi-wavelength dataset, we define the radio populations such as star-formation …


Alpha Radiation Studies And Related Backgrounds In The Darkside-50 Detector, Alissa Monte Oct 2018

Alpha Radiation Studies And Related Backgrounds In The Darkside-50 Detector, Alissa Monte

Doctoral Dissertations

DarkSide-50 is the current phase of the DarkSide direct dark matter search program, operating underground at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso in Italy. The detector is a dual-phase argon Time Projection Chamber (TPC), designed for direct detection of Weakly Interacting Massive Particles (WIMPs), and housed within a veto system of liquid scintillator and water Cherenkov detectors. Since switching to a target of low radioactivity argon extracted from underground sources in April 2015, the background is no longer dominated by naturally occurring 39Ar. However, alpha backgrounds from radon and its daughters remain, both from the liquid argon bulk and internal …


The Clustering Of Young Stellar Clusters In Nearby Galaxies, Kathryn Grasha Jul 2018

The Clustering Of Young Stellar Clusters In Nearby Galaxies, Kathryn Grasha

Doctoral Dissertations

Star clusters form the basic building blocks of galaxies. They span a wide range of ages, from a few million years to billions of years, making them exceptional tracers of the star formation histories of their host galaxies. Star formation is the process by which galaxies build up their stellar populations and their visible mass and occurs in a continuous, hierarchical "social" fashion across a large dynamical range, from individual stars up to kiloparsec-scale ensembles of stellar aggregates. It is the formation, evolution, and eventual destruction of these large hierarchical star-forming complexes that provide an essential role in understanding the …


Analyses Of Densely Crosslinked Phenolic Systems Using Low Field Nmr, Jigneshkumar Patel Nov 2017

Analyses Of Densely Crosslinked Phenolic Systems Using Low Field Nmr, Jigneshkumar Patel

Doctoral Dissertations

A uniform dispersion of reactants is necessary to achieve a complete reaction involving multi-components, especially for the crosslinking of rigid high-performance materials. In these reactions, miscibility is crucial for curing efficiency. This miscibility is typically enhanced by adding a third component, a plasticizer. For the reaction of the highly crystalline crosslinking agent hexamethylenetetramine (HMTA) with a strongly hydrogen-bonded phenol formaldehyde resin, furfural has been traditionally used as the plasticizer. However, the reason for its effectiveness is not clear. In this doctoral thesis work, miscibility and crosslinking efficiency of plasticizers in phenolic curing reactions are studied by thermal analysis and spectroscopic …


Production Of Cosmological Observables During The Inflationary Epoch, Cody Goolsby-Cole Nov 2017

Production Of Cosmological Observables During The Inflationary Epoch, Cody Goolsby-Cole

Doctoral Dissertations

This dissertation proposal explores the production of present day cosmological observables which might have been produced during the inflationary era. The first observable is the current net electric charge of our observable universe produced by charge fluctuations during inflation. Next, we examine the possibility of a signal in the primordial gravitational wave power spectrum produced by a scalar field with a time dependent mass. Finally, we examine primordial magnetic fields produced during inflation through the Ratra model coupling with the Schwinger effect.


Environmentally Driven Galaxy Evolution And Quenching: Insights From The Low-Redshift Circumgalactic Medium, Joseph Burchett Nov 2017

Environmentally Driven Galaxy Evolution And Quenching: Insights From The Low-Redshift Circumgalactic Medium, Joseph Burchett

Doctoral Dissertations

The gaseous halos of galaxies -- the circumgalactic medium (CGM) -- serve as interfaces playing host to the fueling and feedback processes that sustain and regulate star formation. Furthermore, interactions between galaxies one with another and with larger scale structure, such as galaxy cluster halos, must necessarily act through the CGM. This dissertation examines the CGM as traced by H I, C IV, and O VI absorption lines across wide range of halo environments, from isolated dwarf galaxies with M* < 108 Msun to galaxy clusters with Mhalo > 1014 Msun. By first conducting a blind …


Ultraviolet To Infrared Star Formation Rate Tracers: Characterizing Dust Attenuation And Emission, Andrew Battisti Nov 2017

Ultraviolet To Infrared Star Formation Rate Tracers: Characterizing Dust Attenuation And Emission, Andrew Battisti

Doctoral Dissertations

Star formation rates (SFRs) are among the fundamental properties used to characterize galaxies during their evolution across cosmic times. In the first part of this dissertation, we calibrate continuous, monochromatic SFR indicators over the mid-infrared wavelength range of 6-70 micron. We use a sample of 58 local star-forming galaxies for which there is a rich suite of multi-wavelength photometry and spectroscopy from the ultraviolet through far-infrared. Our results indicate that our mid-infrared SFR indicators are applicable to galaxies over a large range of distances, proving their robustness. We have made the calibrations and diagnostics publicly available to achieve the broadest …


Astrophysical Accretion And Feedback: The Bayesian Linchpin Of Theory And Observation, Shawn Roberts Mar 2017

Astrophysical Accretion And Feedback: The Bayesian Linchpin Of Theory And Observation, Shawn Roberts

Doctoral Dissertations

Despite being a major pillar of galaxy evolution, galactic feedback from stars and supermassive black holes (SMBHs) is subject to very little observational constraint. This is particularly true of the hot component, as viewed in X-rays. Yet, the hot component is directly linked to much of the energetic feedback released from these compact objects. X-ray observations suffer from several challenges that make placing this constraint a difficult task. In the face of considerable model uncertainty, these challenges underscore the need for novel X-ray data analysis techniques. In this dissertation, I seek to lend a unique perspective to X-ray data analysis …


Intrinsic Characteristics Of Galaxies In The Distant Universe: The Correlation Between Galaxy Morphology And Star Formation Activity, Bomee Lee Mar 2017

Intrinsic Characteristics Of Galaxies In The Distant Universe: The Correlation Between Galaxy Morphology And Star Formation Activity, Bomee Lee

Doctoral Dissertations

One of the major questions in observational cosmology is how galaxies formed and how they evolved. In particular, understanding the assembly history of galaxies at the peak epoch of the star formation activity, z=1-3, is a key to understanding the whole picture of the Universe, but remains uncertain. Galaxies with various physical properties and morphologies have different formation and evolution histories. As such, we seek insight into galaxy formation and evolution at z=1-3 using galaxies selected from Cosmic Assembly Near-infrared Deep Extragalactic Legacy Survey (CANDELS) in this dissertation. First, we investigate the relationship between spectral types and morphologies using various …


The Cosmic Web, And The Role Of Environment In Galaxy Evolution, Ryan Cybulski Nov 2016

The Cosmic Web, And The Role Of Environment In Galaxy Evolution, Ryan Cybulski

Doctoral Dissertations

The Universe, on extra-galactic scales, is composed of a vast network of structures dubbed the “cosmic web”. One of the most fundamental discoveries about the evolution of galaxies is that their properties have a dependence on their location relative to this cosmic web (i.e., their environment). However, detailed studies of the environmental dependence on galaxy evolution have been extremely challenging due to the inherent complexity of the structures on the largest scales, a plethora of techniques being used to try to map the cosmic web, and other confounding factors, such as the masses of galaxies, that also affect their evolution. …


The Effect Of A Growing Black Hole On The Infrared Emission Of Dusty Galaxies In The Distant Universe, Allison Kirkpatrick Jul 2016

The Effect Of A Growing Black Hole On The Infrared Emission Of Dusty Galaxies In The Distant Universe, Allison Kirkpatrick

Doctoral Dissertations

The buildup of stellar and black hole mass peaked during z=1-3. Infrared (IR) luminous galaxies, which are massive and heavily dust obscured (LIR > 1011 Lsun), dominate the stellar growth during this era, and many are harboring a hidden active galactic nucleus (AGN). We have quantified the contribution of AGN heating to the infrared emission of a large sample of dusty, luminous galaxies from z=0.5-4 using Spitzer mid-IR spectroscopy, available for every source. We classify sources as star forming galaxies, AGN, or composites based on the presence of mid-IR continuum emission due to a dusty …


The Impact Of Terrestrial Noise On The Detectability And Reconstruction Of Gravitational Wave Signals From Core-Collapse Supernovae, Jessica Mciver Nov 2015

The Impact Of Terrestrial Noise On The Detectability And Reconstruction Of Gravitational Wave Signals From Core-Collapse Supernovae, Jessica Mciver

Doctoral Dissertations

Among of the wide range of potentially interesting astrophysical sources for gravitational wave detectors Advanced LIGO and Advanced Virgo are galactic core-collapse supernovae. Although detectable core-collapse supernovae have a low expected rate (a few per century, or less) these signals would yield a wealth of new physics. Of particular interest is the insight into the explosion mechanism driving core-collapse supernovae that can be gleaned from the reconstructed gravitational wave signal. A well-reconstructed waveform will allow us to assess the likelihood of different explosion models, perform model selection, and potentially map unexpected features to new physics. This dissertation presents a series …


An Empirical Approach To Understanding Of Star Formation In Dark Matter Halos, Zhankui Lu Nov 2015

An Empirical Approach To Understanding Of Star Formation In Dark Matter Halos, Zhankui Lu

Doctoral Dissertations

We present a data-driven approach to understand the star formation in dark matter halos over cosmic time. With a simple empirical model and advanced tools for Bayesian inference, we try to constrain how galaxies have assembled their stars across cosmic time using stellar mass functions (SMFs) and the luminosity function of cluster galaxies. The key ingredients of the empirical model include dark halo merger trees and a generic function that links star formation rate (SFR) to the host halos. We found a new characteristic redshift zc ~ 2 above which the SFR in low mass halos < 1011 solar mass …


Gravitational Wave Astrophysics: Instrumentation, Detector Characterization, And A Search For Gravitational Signals From Gamma-Ray Bursts, Daniel Hoak Nov 2015

Gravitational Wave Astrophysics: Instrumentation, Detector Characterization, And A Search For Gravitational Signals From Gamma-Ray Bursts, Daniel Hoak

Doctoral Dissertations

In the coming years, the second generation of interferometric gravitational wave detectors are widely expected to observe the gravitational radiation emitted by compact, energetic events in the nearby universe. The field of gravitational wave astrophysics has grown into a large international endeavor with a global network of kilometer-scale observatories. The work presented in this thesis spans the field, from optical metrology, to instrument commissioning, to detector characterization and data analysis. The principal results are a method for the precise characterization of optical cavities, the commissioning of the advanced LIGO Output Mode Cleaner at the Hanford observatory, and a search for …


Exact Solutions In Gravity: A Journey Through Spacetime With The Kerr-Schild Ansatz, Benjamin Ett Nov 2015

Exact Solutions In Gravity: A Journey Through Spacetime With The Kerr-Schild Ansatz, Benjamin Ett

Doctoral Dissertations

The Kerr-Schild metric ansatz can be expressed in the form $g_{ab} = \gbar_{ab}+\lambda k_ak_b$, where $\gbar_{ab}$ is a background metric satisfying Einstein's equations, $k_a$ is a null-vector, and $\lambda$ is a free parameter. It was discovered in 1963 while searching for the elusive rotating black hole solutions to Einstein's equations, fifty years after the static solution was found and Einstein first formulated his theory of general relativity. While the ansatz has proved an excellent tool in the search for new exact solutions since then, its scope is limited, particularly with respect to higher dimensional theories. In this thesis, we present …