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91探花
Black Hole

Lensing of space time around a black hole. At 91探花 we study black holes observationally and theoretically on all size and time scales - it is some of our core work.

Credit: ALAIN RIAZUELO, IAP/UPMC/CNRS. CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE IMAGES.

Professor Pedro Ferreira

Professor of Astrophysics

Research theme

  • Particle astrophysics & cosmology

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Beecroft Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology
pedro.ferreira@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73366
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 757
  • About
  • Publications

Polarization-temperature correlation from a primordial magnetic field

PHYSICAL REVIEW D 56:12 (1997) R7493-R7497

Authors:

ES Scannapieco, PG Ferreira

Structure formation with a self-tuning scalar field

PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS 79:24 (1997) 4740-4743

Authors:

PG Ferreira, M Joyce

Non-Gaussian Spectra

(1996)

Authors:

Pedro G Ferreira, Joao Magueijo

Non-Gaussian Spectra

ArXiv astro-ph/9610174 (1996)

Authors:

Pedro G Ferreira, Joao Magueijo

Abstract:

Gaussian cosmic microwave background skies are fully specified by the power spectrum. The conventional method of characterizing non-Gaussian skies is to evaluate higher order moments, the n-point functions and their Fourier transforms. We argue that this method is inefficient, due to the redundancy of information existing in the complete set of moments. In this paper we propose a set of new statistics or non-Gaussian spectra to be extracted out of the angular distribution of the Fourier transform of the temperature anisotropies in the small field limit. These statistics complement the power spectrum and act as localization, shape, and connectedness statistics. They quantify generic non-Gaussian structure, and may be used in more general image processing tasks. We concentrate on a subset of these statistics and argue that while they carry no information in Gaussian theories they may be the best arena for making predictions in some non-Gaussian theories. As examples of applications we consider superposed Gaussian and non-Gaussian signals, such as point sources in Gaussian theories or the realistic Kaiser-Stebbins effect. We show that in these theories non-Gaussianity is only present in a ring in Fourier space, which is best isolated in our formalism. Subtle but strongly non-Gaussian theories are also written down for which only non-Gaussian spectra may accuse non-Gaussianity.

Microwave Anisotropies from Random Sources

(1996)

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