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Full-Text Articles in Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Searches For Fast Radio Bursts Using Machine Learning, Devansh Agarwal
Searches For Fast Radio Bursts Using Machine Learning, Devansh Agarwal
Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports
Fast Radio bursts (FRBs) are enigmatic astrophysical events with millisecond durations and flux densities in the range 0.1-100 Jy, with the prototype source discovered by Lorimer et al. (2007). Like pulsars, FRBs show the characteristic inverse square sweep in observing frequency due to propagation through an ionized medium. This effect is quantified by the dispersion measure (DM). Unlike pulsars, FRBs have anomalously high DMs, which are consistent with an extragalactic origin. Over 100 FRBs have been published at the time of writing, and 13 have been conclusively identified with host galaxies with spectroscopically determined redshifts in the range 0.003 ≤ …
Searching For Needles In The Cosmic Haystack, Thomas Ryan Devine
Searching For Needles In The Cosmic Haystack, Thomas Ryan Devine
Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports
Searching for pulsar signals in radio astronomy data sets is a difficult task. The data sets are extremely large, approaching the petabyte scale, and are growing larger as instruments become more advanced. Big Data brings with it big challenges. Processing the data to identify candidate pulsar signals is computationally expensive and must utilize parallelism to be scalable. Labeling benchmarks for supervised classification is costly. To compound the problem, pulsar signals are very rare, e.g., only 0.05% of the instances in one data set represent pulsars. Furthermore, there are many different approaches to candidate classification with no consensus on a best …
Modeling The Galactic Compact Binary Neutron Star Population And Studying The Double Pulsar System, Nihan Pol
Modeling The Galactic Compact Binary Neutron Star Population And Studying The Double Pulsar System, Nihan Pol
Graduate Theses, Dissertations, and Problem Reports
Binary neutron star (BNS) systems consisting of at least one neutron star provide an avenue for testing a broad range of physical phenomena ranging from tests of General Relativity to probing magnetospheric physics to understanding the behavior of matter in the densest environments in the Universe. Ultra-compact BNS systems with orbital periods less than few tens of minutes emit gravitational waves with frequencies ~mHz and are detectable by the planned space-based Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA), while merging BNS systems produce a chirping gravitational wave signal that can be detected by the ground-based Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory (LIGO). Thus, BNS …