This review summarizes evidence for anomalous microwave emission and projects how SKA observations will identify its carriers and mechanisms in Galactic and extragalactic environments.
Detecting Weak Spectral Lines in Interferometric Data through Matched Filtering
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abstract
Modern radio interferometers enable observations of spectral lines with unprecedented spatial resolution and sensitivity. In spite of these technical advances, many lines of interest are still at best weakly detected and therefore necessitate detection and analysis techniques specialized for the low signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) regime. Matched filters can leverage knowledge of the source structure and kinematics to increase sensitivity of spectral line observations. Application of the filter in the native Fourier domain improves SNR while simultaneously avoiding the computational cost and ambiguities associated with imaging, making matched filtering a fast and robust method for weak spectral line detection. We demonstrate how an approximate matched filter can be constructed from a previously observed line or from a model of the source, and we show how this filter can be used to robustly infer a detection significance for weak spectral lines. When applied to ALMA Cycle 2 observations of CH3OH in the protoplanetary disk around TW Hya, the technique yields a ~53% SNR boost over aperture-based spectral extraction methods, and we show that an even higher boost will be achieved for observations at higher spatial resolution. A Python-based open-source implementation of this technique is available under the MIT license at https://github.com/AstroChem/VISIBLE.
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astro-ph.GA 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
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Probing Anomalous Microwave Emission with the Square Kilometre Array
This review summarizes evidence for anomalous microwave emission and projects how SKA observations will identify its carriers and mechanisms in Galactic and extragalactic environments.