The Visibility of the 艑tautahi鈥91探花 Interstellar Object Population Model in LSST

The Planetary Science Journal IOP Publishing 6:9 (2025) 214

Authors:

Rosemary C Dorsey, Matthew J Hopkins, Michele T Bannister, Samantha M Lawler, Chris Lintott, Alex H Parker, John C Forbes

Abstract:

With a new probabilistic technique for sampling interstellar object (ISO) orbits with high efficiency, we assess the observability of ISOs under a realistic cadence for the upcoming Vera C. Rubin Observatory鈥檚 Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST). Using the 艑tautahi鈥91探花 population model, we show that there will be complex on-sky structure in the pattern of direction and velocity revealed by the detected ISO population, with the expected enhanced northern flux complicating efforts to derive population parameters from the LSST鈥檚 predominately southern footprint. For reasonable luminosity functions with slopes of 2.5 鈮 qs 鈮 4.0, the most discoverable ISOs have Hr 鈮 14.6鈭20.7. The slope of the luminosity function of ISOs will be relatively quickly constrained by the characteristics of the LSST detected population, such as the distributions of perihelia, velocity at infinity, and discovery circumstances. Discoveries are evenly split around their perihelion passage and are biased to lower velocities. After their discovery by LSST, it will be rare for ISOs to be visible for less than a month; most will have mr 鈮 23 for months, and the window for spectroscopic characterization could be as long as 2 yr. While these probabilistic assessments are robust against model or spatial density refinements that change the absolute numbers of ISO discoveries, our simulations predict a yield of 6鈥51 asteroidal ISOs, which is similar to previous works and demonstrates the validity of our new methods.

A Parameter-masked Mock Data Challenge for Beyond-two-point Galaxy Clustering Statistics

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 990:2 (2025) 99

Authors:

The Beyond-2pt Collaboration, Elisabeth Krause, Yosuke Kobayashi, Andr茅s N Salcedo, Mikhail M Ivanov, Tom Abel, Kazuyuki Akitsu, Raul E Angulo, Giovanni Cabass, Sofia Contarini, Carolina Cuesta-Lazaro, ChangHoon Hahn, Nico Hamaus, Donghui Jeong, Chirag Modi, Nhat-Minh Nguyen, Takahiro Nishimichi, Enrique Paillas, Marcos Pellejero Iba帽ez, Oliver HE Philcox, Alice Pisani, Fabian Schmidt, Satoshi Tanaka, Giovanni Verza, Sihan Yuan, Matteo Zennaro

Abstract:

The past few years have seen the emergence of a wide array of novel techniques for analyzing high-precision data from upcoming galaxy surveys, which aim to extend the statistical analysis of galaxy clustering data beyond the linear regime and the canonical two-point (2pt) statistics. We test and benchmark some of these new techniques in a community data challenge named 鈥淏eyond-2pt,鈥 initiated during the Aspen 2022 Summer Program 鈥淟arge-Scale Structure Cosmology beyond 2-Point Statistics,鈥 whose first round of results we present here. The challenge data set consists of high-precision mock galaxy catalogs for clustering in real space, in redshift space, and on a light cone. Participants in the challenge have developed end-to-end pipelines to analyze mock catalogs and extract unknown (鈥渕asked鈥) cosmological parameters of the underlying 螞CDM models with their methods. The methods represented are density-split clustering, nearest neighbor statistics, BACCO power spectrum emulator, void statistics, LEFTfield field-level inference using effective field theory (EFT), and joint power spectrum and bispectrum analyses using both EFT and simulation-based inference. In this work, we review the results of the challenge, focusing on problems solved, lessons learned, and future research needed to perfect the emerging beyond-2pt approaches. The unbiased parameter recovery demonstrated in this challenge by multiple statistics and the associated modeling and inference frameworks 91探花s the credibility of cosmology constraints from these methods. The challenge data set is publicly available, and we welcome future submissions from methods that are not yet represented.

From a Different Star: 3I/ATLAS in the Context of the 艑tautahi鈥91探花 Interstellar Object Population Model

The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 990:2 (2025) L30

Authors:

Matthew J Hopkins, Rosemary C Dorsey, John C Forbes, Michele T Bannister, Chris J Lintott, Brayden Leicester

Abstract:

The discovery of the third interstellar object (ISO), 3I/ATLAS (鈥3I鈥), provides a rare chance to directly observe a small body from another solar system. Studying its chemistry and dynamics will add to our understanding of how the processes of planetesimal formation and evolution happen across the Milky Way鈥檚 disk, and how such objects respond to the Milky Way鈥檚 potential. In this Letter, we present a first assessment of 3I in the context of the 艑tautahi鈥91探花 model, which uses data from Gaia in conjunction with models of protoplanetary disk chemistry and Galactic dynamics to predict the properties of the ISO population. The model shows that both the velocity and radiant of 3I are within the expected range. Its velocity predicts an age of over 7.6 Gyr and a high water mass fraction, which may become observable shortly. We also conclude that it is very unlikely that 3I shares an origin with either of the previous two ISO detections.

The ALMA-CRISTAL survey: Resolved kinematic studies of main sequence star-forming galaxies at 4 < z < 6

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 701 (2025) a260

Authors:

Lilian L Lee, Natascha M F枚rster Schreiber, Rodrigo Herrera-Camus, Daizhong Liu, Sedona H Price, Reinhard Genzel, Linda J Tacconi, Dieter Lutz, Ric Davies, Thorsten Naab, Hannah 脺bler, Manuel Aravena, Roberto J Assef, Loreto Barcos-Mu帽oz, Rebecca AA Bowler, Andreas Burkert, Jianhang Chen, Rebecca L Davies, Ilse De Looze, Tanio Diaz-Santos, Jorge Gonz谩lez-L贸pez, Ryota Ikeda, Ikki Mitsuhashi, Ana Posses, M贸nica Rela帽o Pastor, Alvio Renzini, Manuel Solimano, Justin S Spilker, Amiel Sternberg, Kenichi Tadaki, Kseniia Telikova, Sylvain Veilleux, Vicente Villanueva

Abstract:

We present a detailed kinematic study of a sample of 32 massive (9.5 猢 log( M * /M 鈯 ) 猢 10.9) main sequence star-forming galaxies (MS SFGs) at 4 < z < 6 from the ALMA-CRISTAL programme. The data consist of deep (up to 15 hr observing time per target), high-resolution (鈭1 kpc) ALMA observations of [C鈥 II ]158 渭m line emission. This dataset allowed us to carry out the first systematic, kiloparsec-scale (kpc-scale) characterisation of the kinematics nature of typical massive SFGs at these epochs. We find that 鈭50% of the sample are disk-like, with a number of galaxies located in systems of multiple components. Kinematic modelling reveals these main sequence disks exhibit high-velocity dispersions ( 蟽 0 ), with a median disk velocity dispersion of 鈭70 km s 鈭1 and V rot / 蟽 0 鈭 2, which is consistent with dominant gravity driving. The elevated disk dispersions are in line with the predicted evolution based on Toomre theory and the extrapolated trends from z 鈭 0鈥2.5 MS star-forming disks. The inferred dark matter (DM) mass fraction within the effective radius f DM (< R e ) for the disk systems decreases with the central baryonic mass surface density. This is consistent with the trend reported by kinematic studies at z 鈮 3; roughly half the disks display f DM (< R e )鈮 30%. The CRISTAL sample of massive MS SFGs provides a reference of the kinematics of a representative population and extends the view onto typical galaxies beyond previous kpc-scale studies at z 鈮 3.

Assessing Cosmological Evidence for Nonminimal Coupling

Physical Review Letters American Physical Society (APS) 135:8 (2025) 081001

Authors:

William J Wolf, Carlos Garc铆a-Garc铆a, Theodore Anton, Pedro G Ferreira

Abstract:

The recent observational evidence of deviations from the Lambda cold dark matter model points toward the presence of evolving dark energy. The simplest possibility consists of a cosmological scalar field <math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="inline"> <mi>蠁</mi> </math> , dubbed 鈥渜uintessence,鈥 driving the accelerated expansion. We assess the evidence for the existence of such a scalar field. We find that, if the accelerated expansion is driven by quintessence, the data favor a potential energy <math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="inline"> <mi>V</mi> <mo stretchy="false">(</mo> <mi>蠁</mi> <mo stretchy="false">)</mo> </math> that is concave, i.e., <math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="inline"> <mrow> <msup> <mrow> <mi>m</mi> </mrow> <mrow> <mn>2</mn> </mrow> </msup> <mo>=</mo> <msup> <mrow> <mi>d</mi> </mrow> <mrow> <mn>2</mn> </mrow> </msup> <mi>V</mi> <mo>/</mo> <mi>d</mi> <msup> <mrow> <mi>蠁</mi> </mrow> <mrow> <mn>2</mn> </mrow> </msup> <mo>&lt;</mo> <mn>0</mn> </mrow> </math> . Furthermore, and more significantly, the data strongly favor a scalar field that is nonminimally coupled to gravity [Bayes factor <math xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="inline"> <mrow> <mi>log</mi> <mo stretchy="false">(</mo> <mi>B</mi> <mo stretchy="false">)</mo> <mo>=</mo> <mn>7.34</mn> <mo>卤</mo> <mn>0.6</mn> </mrow> </math> ], leading to time variations in the gravitational constant on cosmological scales, and the existence of fifth forces on smaller scales. The fact that we do not observe such fifth forces implies that new physics must come into play on noncosmological scales that quintessence is an unlikely explanation for the observed cosmic acceleration.