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Redshifting spectra with a redder spectral coverage than the standard OzDES setting #148
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Unfortunately there isn't at the moment. Changing the redshift range is not
actually trivial either, as it would require recreating the log bins for
all templates and additionally renormalizing the template weights. There is
a fork of Marz which has high redshift templates, I'll look up who made the
fork when I'm off the bus.
…On 5 Dec. 2017 1:25 pm, "clidman" ***@***.***> wrote:
I a currently using Marz to redshift Gemini data of a galaxy cluster at z1.0,
using spectra that have a spectral range going from 560 to 1040nm. Xcor
seems to be done up to z1.0 and no further. Is there a parameter one can
set that ensures that the Xcor is done over a larger redshift range.
Note also that one gets starts from time to time, and some stars a
blueshifted, so the lower bound should be -0.01. I suspect that it is at
zero.
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Hi Sam,
I know that you have an incredibly busy couple of weeks coming up, so you should not worry about this now.
OzDES is obtaining redshifts for objects up to z~1.36. This is where the [OII] line reaches the end of the spectral range.
During a run with AAOmega in February next year, I’ll be using a setup that should enable us to get redshifts of
objects up to z~1.6.
Hence there is an argument for extending the upper bound of where the cross correlation is done to z~1.3 and preferably z~1.6.
Cheers,
Chris.
…----
Dr. Chris Lidman
Head of National Facilities Support
Australian Astronomical Observatory
Phone: ++61 (0)2 9372 4823
On 5 Dec 2017, at 5:11 PM, Samuel Hinton ***@***.***> wrote:
Unfortunately there isn't at the moment. Changing the redshift range is not
actually trivial either, as it would require recreating the log bins for
all templates and additionally renormalizing the template weights. There is
a fork of Marz which has high redshift templates, I'll look up who made the
fork when I'm off the bus.
On 5 Dec. 2017 1:25 pm, "clidman" ***@***.***> wrote:
> I a currently using Marz to redshift Gemini data of a galaxy cluster at z1.0,
> using spectra that have a spectral range going from 560 to 1040nm. Xcor
> seems to be done up to z1.0 and no further. Is there a parameter one can
> set that ensures that the Xcor is done over a larger redshift range.
>
> Note also that one gets starts from time to time, and some stars a
> blueshifted, so the lower bound should be -0.01. I suspect that it is at
> zero.
>
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> You are receiving this because you are subscribed to this thread.
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> <https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AGb5WdDuPv44qeOfsV6tymm-BMWFlc7Yks5s9KmmgaJpZM4Q1oha>
> .
>
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Hmm, yeah, lets touch base about it after DES cosmology. Its definitely
doable, just concerned over the flow on impacts regarding the autoQOP and
the overarching concern of introducing a small redshift change when the
behind the scenes algorithm changes at all.
…On Wed, Dec 6, 2017 at 1:31 PM, clidman ***@***.***> wrote:
Hi Sam,
I know that you have an incredibly busy couple of weeks coming up, so you
should not worry about this now.
OzDES is obtaining redshifts for objects up to z~1.36. This is where the
[OII] line reaches the end of the spectral range.
During a run with AAOmega in February next year, I’ll be using a setup
that should enable us to get redshifts of
objects up to z~1.6.
Hence there is an argument for extending the upper bound of where the
cross correlation is done to z~1.3 and preferably z~1.6.
Cheers,
Chris.
----
Dr. Chris Lidman
Head of National Facilities Support
Australian Astronomical Observatory
Phone: ++61 (0)2 9372 4823 <+61%202%209372%204823>
> On 5 Dec 2017, at 5:11 PM, Samuel Hinton ***@***.***>
wrote:
>
> Unfortunately there isn't at the moment. Changing the redshift range is
not
> actually trivial either, as it would require recreating the log bins for
> all templates and additionally renormalizing the template weights. There
is
> a fork of Marz which has high redshift templates, I'll look up who made
the
> fork when I'm off the bus.
>
> On 5 Dec. 2017 1:25 pm, "clidman" ***@***.***> wrote:
>
> > I a currently using Marz to redshift Gemini data of a galaxy cluster
at z1.0,
> > using spectra that have a spectral range going from 560 to 1040nm. Xcor
> > seems to be done up to z1.0 and no further. Is there a parameter one
can
> > set that ensures that the Xcor is done over a larger redshift range.
> >
> > Note also that one gets starts from time to time, and some stars a
> > blueshifted, so the lower bound should be -0.01. I suspect that it is
at
> > zero.
> >
> > —
> > You are receiving this because you are subscribed to this thread.
> > Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub
> > <#148>, or mute the thread
> > <https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-
auth/AGb5WdDuPv44qeOfsV6tymm-BMWFlc7Yks5s9KmmgaJpZM4Q1oha>
> > .
> >
> —
> You are receiving this because you authored the thread.
> Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub <
#148 (comment)>, or
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auth/APBohEAW6r8-z9kjuspbsgNo34m0js86ks5s9N56gaJpZM4Q1oha>.
>
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I a currently using Marz to redshift Gemini data of a galaxy cluster at z=1.05, using spectra that have a spectral range going from 560 to 1040nm. Xcor seems to be done up to z=1.0 and no further. Is there a parameter one can set that ensures that the Xcor is done over a larger redshift range.
Note also that one gets starts from time to time, and some stars a blueshifted, so the lower bound should be -0.01. I suspect that it is at zero.
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