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Introduction
Current institution
Additional affiliations
September 1991 - present
January 1986 - September 1991
Aerojet ElectroSystems, Azusa, California
Position
- Specialist, Technical Staff
October 1981 - April 1985
Hughes Aircraft
Position
- Member of the Technical Staff-Physics
Education
September 2004 - August 2010
September 1975 - June 1980
Publications
Publications (313)
Late-stage Ca-sulfate–filled fractures are common on Mars. Notably, the Shenandoah formation in the western edge of Jezero crater preserves a variety of Ca-sulfate minerals in the fine-grained siliciclastic rocks explored by the Perseverance rover. However, the depositional environment and timing of the formation of these sulfates are unknown. To a...
Phosphorus is an essential component for life, and in-situ identification of phosphate minerals that formed in aqueous conditions directly contributes toward one of the main goals of the Mars 2020 Perseverance rover: to seek signs of ancient habitable environments. In Jezero crater, proximity science analyses within a conglomerate outcrop, “Onahu”...
Late-stage Ca-sulfate-filled fractures are common on Mars. Notably, the Shenandoah formation in the western edge of Jezero crater preserves a variety of Ca-sulfate minerals in the fine-grained siliciclastic rocks explored by the Perseverance rover. However, the depositional environment and timing of the formation of these sulfates is unknown. To ad...
In this work, we studied the x‐ray energy dependence of x‐ray beam diameter focused by polycapillary optics. A quantitative beam diameter–energy relation enables more accurate estimation of the element‐specific interrogation area of a sample using the compositional maps produced by a micro‐XRF system. This improves upon our ability to visualize ind...
Planetary rovers can use onboard data analysis to adapt their measurement plan on the fly, improving the science value of data collected between commands from Earth. This paper describes the implementation of an adaptive sampling algorithm used by PIXL, the X-ray fluorescence spectrometer of the Mars 2020 Perseverance rover. PIXL is deployed using...
On ~sol 370 of the Perseverance rover mission, the Mars 2020 Science Team completed its investigation of igneous units of the Jezero crater floor [1] and directed Perseverance to drive towards the topographic scarp that marks the interface between the crater floor and Jezero’s western delta. The “Delta Front Campaign” consisted of close-up investig...
The Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry (PIXL) is a micro-focus X-ray fluorescence spectrometer that is mounted on the robotic arm of NASA’s Perseverance rover. PIXL scans target surfaces with high spacial resolution yielding detailed analyses of rock or soil elemental chemistry. The elemental maps are produced by a narrow 120 μm X-ray be...
In some applications, a robot arm has to position instrumentation/payloads accurately relative to an unknown surface. This article describes an optical sensor system for doing so. The sensor is based on a number of different image processing techniques combined with optical stimulation. More specifically, the system utilizes a camera, floodlight, s...
The geological units on the floor of Jezero crater, Mars, are part of a wider regional stratigraphy of olivine-rich rocks, which extends well beyond the crater. We investigate the petrology of olivine and carbonate-bearing rocks of the Séítah formation in the floor of Jezero. Using multispectral images and x-ray fluorescence data, acquired by the P...
The Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry (PIXL) is a micro-focus X-ray fluorescence spectrometer mounted on the robotic arm of NASA's Perseverance rover. PIXL will acquire high spatial resolution observations of rock and soil chemistry, rapidly analyzing the elemental chemistry of a target surface. In 10 seconds, PIXL can use its powerful...
A Correction to this paper has been published: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11214-021-00801-2
Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry (PIXL) is a micro-focus X-ray fluorescence spectrometer mounted on the robotic arm of NASA’s Perseverance rover. PIXL will acquire high spatial resolution observations of rock and soil chemistry, rapidly analyzing the elemental chemistry of a target surface. In 10 seconds, PIXL can use its powerful 120...
The Planck mission, thanks to its large frequency range and all-sky coverage, has a unique potential for systematically detecting the brightest, and rarest, submillimetre sources on the sky, including distant objects in the high-redshift Universe traced by their dust emission. A novel method, based on a component-separation procedure using a combin...
The secondary cosmic microwave background (CMB) B-modes stem from the post-decoupling distortion of the polarization E-modes due to the gravitational lensing effect of large-scale structures. These lensing-induced B-modes constitute both a valuable probe of the dark matter distribution and an important contaminant for the extraction of the primary...
Continuum spectra covering centimetre to submillimetre wavelengths are presented for a northern sample of 104 extragalactic radio sources, mainly active galactic nuclei, based on four-epoch Planck data. The nine Planck frequencies, from 30 to 857 GHz, are complemented by a set of simultaneous ground-based radio observations between 1.1 and 37 GHz....
We present the implications for cosmic inflation of the Planck measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies in both temperature and polarization based on the full Planck survey, which includes more than twice the integration time of the nominal survey used for the 2013 release papers. The Planck full mission temperature data a...
This paper presents the characterization of the in-flight beams, the beam window functions, and the associated uncertainties for the Planck Low Frequency Instrument (LFI). The structure of the paper is similar to that presented in the 2013 Planck release; the main differences concern the beam normalization and the delivery of the window functions t...
The Planck High Frequency Instrument (HFI) has observed the full sky at six frequencies (100, 143, 217, 353, 545, and 857 GHz) in intensity and at four frequencies in linear polarization (100, 143, 217, and 353 GHz). In order to obtain sky maps, the time-ordered information (TOI) containing the detector and pointing samples must be processed and th...
We test the statistical isotropy and Gaussianity of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies using observations made by the Planck satellite. Our results are based mainly on the full Planck mission for temperature, but also include some polarization measurements. In particular, we consider the CMB anisotropy maps derived from the multi-fr...
We present the implications for cosmic inflation of the Planck measurements of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies in both temperature and polarization based on the full Planck survey, which includes more than twice the integration time of the nominal survey used for the 2013 release papers. The Planck full mission temperature data a...
We present an updated description of the Planck Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) data processing pipeline, associated with the 2015 data release. We point out the places where our results and methods have remained unchanged since the 2013 paper and we highlight the changes made for the 2015 release, describing the products (especially timelines) and...
Continuum spectra covering centimetre to submillimetre wavelengths are presented for a northern sample of 104 extragalactic radio sources, mainly active galactic nuclei, based on four-epoch Planck data. The nine Planck frequencies, from 30 to 857 GHz, are complemented by a set of simultaneous ground-based radio observations between 1.1 and 37 GHz....
We discuss the Galactic foreground emission between 20 and 100 GHz based on observations by Planck and WMAP. The total intensity in this part of the spectrum is dominated by free-free and spinning dust emission, whereas the polarized intensity is dominated by synchrotron emission. The Commander component-separation tool has been used to separate th...
Planck has mapped the microwave sky in temperature over nine frequency bands between 30 and 857 GHz and in polarization over seven frequency bands between 30 and 353 GHz in polarization. In this paper we consider the problem of diffuse astrophysical component separation, and process these maps within a Bayesian framework to derive an internally con...
We compute and investigate four types of imprint of a stochastic background of primordial magnetic fields (PMFs) on the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies: the impact of PMFs on the CMB temperature and polarization spectra, which is related to their contribution to cosmological perturbations; the effect on CMB polarization induced by Fa...
We present the 8th Full Focal Plane simulation set (FFP8), deployed in support of the Planck 2015 results. FFP8 consists of 10 fiducial mission realizations reduced to 18 144 maps, together with the most massive suite of Monte Carlo realizations of instrument noise and CMB ever generated, comprising 10 4 mission realizations reduced to about 10 6 m...
Although infrared (IR) overall dust emission from clusters of galaxies has been statistically detected using data from the Infrared Astronomical Satellite (IRAS), it has not been possible to sample the spectral energy distribution (SED) of this emission over its peak, and thus to break the degeneracy between dust temperature and mass. By complement...
The Planck full mission cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature and E-mode polarization maps are analysed to obtain constraints on primordial non-Gaussianity (NG). Using three classes of optimal bispectrum estimators – separable template-fitting (KSW), binned, and modal – we obtain consistent values for the primordial local, equilateral, and...
We present the current accounting of systematic effect uncertainties for the Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) that are relevant to the 2015 release of the Planck cosmological results, showing the robustness and consistency of our data set, especially for polarization analysis. We use two complementary approaches: (i) simulations based on measured dat...
PIXL (Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochem.) is a micro-focus X-ray fluorescence instrument for
examg. fine scale chem. variations in rocks and soils on planetary surfaces. Selected for flight on the Mars
2020 rover science payload, PIXL can measure elemental chem. of tiny features obsd. in rocks, such as
individual sand grains, veinlets, cemen...
We present an updated description of the Planck Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) data processing pipeline, associated with the 2015 data release. We point out the places where our results and methods have remained unchanged since the 2013 paper and we highlight the changes made for the 2015 release, describing the products (especially timelines) and...
© ESO, 2016.This paper describes the mapmaking procedure applied to Planck Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) data. The mapmaking step takes as input the calibrated timelines and pointing information. The main products are sky maps of I, Q, and U Stokes components. For the first time, we present polarization maps at LFI frequencies. The mapmaking algor...
The Planck Collaboration acknowledges the support of: ESA; CNES and CNRS/INSU-IN2P3-INP (France); ASI, CNR, and INAF (Italy); NASA and DoE (USA); STFC and UKSA (UK); CSIC, MINECO, JA, and, RES (Spain); Tekes, AoF, and CSC (Finland); DLR and MPG (Germany); CSA (Canada); DTU Space (Denmark); SER/SSO (Switzerland); RCN (Norway); SFI (Ireland); FCT/MCT...
We present all-sky dust modelling of the high resolution Planck, IRAS and WISE infrared (IR) observations using the physical dust model presented by Draine & Li in 2007 (DL). We study the performance of this model and present implications for future dust modelling. The present work extends to the full sky the dust modelling carried out on nearby ga...
Recent models for the large-scale Galactic magnetic fields in the literature
were largely constrained by synchrotron emission and Faraday rotation measures.
We select three different but representative models and compare their predicted
polarized synchrotron and dust emission with that measured by the Planck
satellite. We first update these models...
We present a description of the pipeline used to calibrate the Planck Low Frequency Instrument (LFI) timelines into thermodynamic temperatures for the Planck 2015 data release, covering four years of uninterrupted operations. As in the 2013 data release, our calibrator is provided by the spin-synchronous modulation of the cosmic microwave backgroun...
The lensing-induced $B$-mode signal is a valuable probe of the dark matter
distribution integrated back to the last-scattering surface, with a broad
kernel that peaks at $z\simeq2$. It also constitutes an important contaminant
for the extraction of the primary CMB $B$-modes from inflation. Combining
all-sky coverage and high resolution and sensitiv...
A new generation of planetary rover instruments, such as PIXL (Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry) and SHERLOC (Scanning Habitable Environments with Raman Luminescence for Organics and Chemicals) selected for the Mars 2020 mission rover payload, aim to map mineralogical and elemental composition in situ at microscopic scales. These instr...
The Virgo cluster is the largest Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) source in the sky,
both in terms of angular size and total integrated flux. Planck's wide angular
scale and frequency coverage, together with its high sensitivity, allow a
detailed study of this large object through the SZ effect. Virgo is well
resolved by Planck, showing an elongated structur...
The all-sky Planck survey in 9 frequency bands was used to search for
emission from all 274 known Galactic supernova remnants. Of these, 16 were
detected in at least two Planck frequencies. The radio-through-microwave
spectral energy distributions were compiled to determine the emission mechanism
for microwave emission. In only one case, IC 443, is...
This paper describes the processing applied to the cleaned, time-ordered information obtained from the Planck High Frequency Instrument (HFI) with the aim of producing photometrically calibrated maps in temperature and (for the first time) in polarization. The data from the entire 2.5-year HFI mission include almost five full-sky surveys. HFI obser...
We present the Planck Catalogue of Galactic Cold Clumps (PGCC), an all-sky catalogue of Galactic cold clump candidates detected by Planck. This catalogue is the full version of the Early Cold Core (ECC) catalogue, which was made available in 2011 with the Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) and contained 915 high signal-to-noise sources....
See paper for full list of authors, 18 pages, 16 figures
We use Planck data to detect the cross-correlation between the thermal
Sunyaev-Zeldovich (tSZ) effect and the infrared emission from the galaxies that
make up the the cosmic infrared background (CIB). We first perform a stacking
analysis towards Planck-confirmed galaxy clusters. We detect infrared emission
produced by dusty galaxies inside these cl...
We present the 8th Full Focal Plane simulation set (FFP8), deployed in
support of the Planck 2015 results. FFP8 consists of 10 fiducial mission
realizations reduced to 18144 maps, together with the most massive suite of
Monte Carlo realizations of instrument noise and CMB ever generated, comprising
$10^4$ mission realizations reduced to about $10^6...
We update the all-sky Planck catalogue of 1227 clusters and cluster candidates (PSZ1) published in March 2013, derived from detections of the Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) effect using the first 15.5 months of Planck satellite observations. As an addendum, we deliver an updated version of the PSZ1 catalogue, reporting the further confirmation of 86 Planck...
The Planck mission, thanks to its large frequency range and all-sky coverage, has a unique potential for systematically detecting the brightest, and rarest, submillimetre sources on the sky, including distant objects in the high-redshift Universe traced by their dust emission. A novel method, based on a component-separation procedure using a combin...
The European Space Agency’s Planck satellite, dedicated to studying the early Universe and its subsequent evolution, was launched 14 May 2009 and scanned the microwave and submillimetre sky continuously between 12 August 2009 and 23 October 2013. In February 2015, ESA and the Planck Collaboration released the second set of cosmology products based...
This paper presents the Planck 2015 likelihoods, statistical descriptions of
the 2-point correlation functions of CMB temperature and polarization. They use
the hybrid approach employed previously: pixel-based at low multipoles, $\ell$,
and a Gaussian approximation to the distribution of cross-power spectra at
higher $\ell$. The main improvements a...
The Second Planck Catalogue of Compact Sources is a catalogue of sources
detected in single-frequency maps from the full duration of the Planck mission
and supersedes previous versions of the Planck compact source catalogues. It
consists of compact sources, both Galactic and extragalactic, detected over the
entire sky. Compact sources detected in t...
(abridged) We discuss the Galactic foreground emission between 20 and 100GHz
based on observations by Planck/WMAP. The Commander component-separation tool
has been used to separate the various astrophysical processes in total
intensity. Comparison with RRL templates verifies the recovery of the free-free
emission along the Galactic plane. Compariso...
PIXL (Planetary Instrument for X-ray Lithochemistry) is a micro-focus X-ray fluorescence instrument for examining fine scale chemical variations in rocks and soils on planetary surfaces. Selected for flight on the science payload for the proposed Mars 2020 rover, PIXL can measure elemental chemistry of tiny features observed in rocks, such as indiv...
We present a description of the pipeline used to calibrate the Planck Low
Frequency Instrument (LFI) timelines into thermodynamic temperatures for the
Planck 2015 data release, covering 4 years of uninterrupted operations. As in
the 2013 data release, our calibrator is provided by the spin-synchronous
modulation of the CMB dipole, exploiting both t...
The quest for a $B$-mode imprint from primordial gravity waves on the
polarization of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) requires the
characterization of foreground polarization from Galactic dust. We present a
statistical study of the filamentary structure of the $353\,$GHz Planck Stokes
maps at high Galactic latitude, relevant to the study of...
We present the results of approximately three years of observations of Planck
Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) sources with telescopes at the Canary Islands
observatories, as part of the general optical follow-up programme undertaken by
the Planck collaboration. In total, 78 SZ sources are discussed. Deep imaging
observations were obtained for most of those...
By looking at the kinetic Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect (kSZ) in Planck nominal
mission data, we present a significant detection of baryons participating in
large-scale bulk flows around central galaxies (CGs) at redshift $z\approx
0.1$. We estimate the pairwise momentum of the kSZ temperature fluctuations at
the positions of the CGC (Central Galaxy Cat...
We present foreground-reduced CMB maps derived from the full Planck data set
in both temperature and polarization. Compared to the corresponding Planck 2013
temperature sky maps, the total data volume is larger by a factor of 3.2 for
frequencies between 30 and 70 GHz, and by 1.9 for frequencies between 100 and
857 GHz. In addition, systematic error...
Within ten nearby (d < 450 pc) Gould Belt molecular clouds we evaluate
statistically the relative orientation between the magnetic field projected on
the plane of sky, inferred from the polarized thermal emission of Galactic dust
observed by Planck at 353 GHz, and the gas column density structures,
quantified by the gradient of the column density,...
We present the implications for cosmic inflation of the Planck measurements
of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropies in both temperature and
polarization based on the full Planck survey. The Planck full mission
temperature data and a first release of polarization data on large angular
scales measure the spectral index of curvature pert...
We present the most significant measurement of the cosmic microwave
background (CMB) lensing potential to date (at a level of 40 sigma), using
temperature and polarization data from the Planck 2015 full-mission release.
Using a polarization-only estimator we detect lensing at a significance of 5
sigma. We cross-check the accuracy of our measurement...
This paper describes the mapmaking procedure applied to Planck LFI (Low
Frequency Instrument) data. The mapmaking step takes as input the calibrated
timelines and pointing information. The main products are sky maps of $I,Q$,
and $U$ Stokes components. For the first time, we present polarization maps at
LFI frequencies. The mapmaking algorithm is b...
Planck has mapped the microwave sky in nine frequency bands between 30 and
857 GHz in temperature and seven bands between 30 and 353 GHz in polarization.
In this paper we consider the problem of diffuse astrophysical component
separation, and process these maps within a Bayesian framework to derive a
consistent set of full-sky astrophysical compone...
We study the implications of Planck data for models of dark energy (DE) and
modified gravity (MG), beyond the cosmological constant scenario. We start with
cases where the DE only directly affects the background evolution, considering
Taylor expansions of the equation of state, principal component analysis and
parameterizations related to the poten...
We have constructed all-sky y-maps of the thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich (tSZ)
effect by applying specifically tailored component separation algorithms to the
30 to 857 GHz frequency channel maps from the Planck satellite survey. These
reconstructed y-maps are delivered as part of the Planck 2015 release. The
y-maps are characterised in terms of noise p...
We present the all-sky Planck catalogue of Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) sources
detected from the 29 month full-mission data. The catalogue (PSZ2) is the
largest SZ-selected sample of galaxy clusters yet produced and the deepest
all-sky catalogue of galaxy clusters. It contains 1653 detections, of which
1203 are confirmed clusters with identified counter...
We present the Planck Catalogue of Galactic Cold Clumps (PGCC), an all-sky
catalogue of Galactic cold clump candidates detected by Planck. This catalogue
is the full version of the Early Cold Core (ECC) catalogue, which was made
available in 2011 with the Early Release Compact Source Catalogue (ERCSC) and
contained 915 high S/N sources. It is based...
The Planck High Frequency Instrument (HFI) has observed the full sky at six
frequencies (100, 143, 217, 353, 545, and 857 GHz) in intensity and at four
frequencies in linear polarization (100, 143, 217, and 353 GHz). In order to
obtain sky maps, the time-ordered information (TOI) containing the detector and
pointing samples must be processed and th...
This paper describes the processing applied to the Planck High Frequency
Instrument (HFI) cleaned, time-ordered information to produce photometrically
calibrated maps in temperature and (for the first time) in polarization. The
data from the 2.5 year full mission include almost five independent full-sky
surveys. HFI observes the sky over a broad ra...
We present results based on full-mission Planck observations of temperature
and polarization anisotropies of the CMB. These data are consistent with the
six-parameter inflationary LCDM cosmology. From the Planck temperature and
lensing data, for this cosmology we find a Hubble constant, H0= (67.8 +/- 0.9)
km/s/Mpc, a matter density parameter Omega_...
Full-sky CMB maps from the 2015 Planck release allow us to detect departures
from global isotropy on the largest scales. We present the first searches using
CMB polarization for correlations induced by a non-trivial topology with a
fundamental domain intersecting, or nearly intersecting, the last scattering
surface (at comoving distance $\chi_{rec}...
We predict and investigate four types of imprint of a stochastic background
of primordial magnetic fields (PMFs) on the cosmic microwave background (CMB)
anisotropies: the impact of PMFs on the CMB spectra; the effect on CMB
polarization induced by Faraday rotation; magnetically-induced
non-Gaussianities; and the magnetically-induced breaking of st...
This paper presents a study of the integrated Sachs-Wolfe (ISW) effect from the Planck 2015 temperature and polarization data release. This secondary cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropy caused by the large-scale time-evolving gravitational potential is probed from different perspectives. The CMB is cross-correlated with different large-sca...
The European Space Agency's Planck satellite, dedicated to studying the early Universe and its subsequent evolution, was launched 14 May 2009 and scanned the microwave and submillimetre sky continuously between 12 August 2009 and 23 October 2013. In February 2015, ESA and the Planck Collaboration released the second set of cosmology products based...
The Planck full mission cosmic microwave background (CMB) temperature and E-mode polarization maps are analysed to obtain constraints on primordial non-Gaussianity (NG). Using three classes of optimal bispectrum estimators — separable template-fitting (KSW), binned, and modal — we obtain consistent values for the primordial local, equilateral, and...
We report the results of a joint analysis of data from BICEP2/Keck Array and
Planck. BICEP2 and Keck Array have observed the same approximately 400 deg$^2$
patch of sky centered on RA 0h, Dec. $-57.5\deg$. The combined maps reach a
depth of 57 nK deg in Stokes $Q$ and $U$ in a band centered at 150 GHz. Planck
has observed the full sky in polarizati...
Planck has mapped the polarized dust emission over the whole sky, making it
possible to trace the Galactic magnetic field structure that pervades the
interstellar medium (ISM). We combine polarization data from Planck with
rotation measure (RM) observations towards a massive star-forming region, the
Rosette Nebula in the Monoceros molecular cloud,...
15 pages, 14 figures, submitted to A&A - See paper for full list of authors
42 pages, 36 figures. Submitted to A&A - See paper for full list of authors
See paper for full list of authors
Any variation in the fundamental physical constants, more particularly in the fine structure constant, a, or in the mass of the electron, me, affects the recombination history of the Universe and cause an imprint on the cosmic microwave background angular power spectra. We show that the Planck data allow one to improve the constraint on the time va...