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First Light for the Millennium Run Observatory
| 25-10-24 | 【 【打印】【关闭】
  
False-colour images of the Hubble Ultra Deep Field as predicted  by the Millennium Run Observatory (left) and as actually observed by the  Hubble Space Telescope (right). The images measure about 5’ by 5’, and  were constructed from virtual and real observations through the filters V  (blue), i (green), and z (red). The resemblance between the virtual  image constructed using the MRObs and the actual image seen by HST is  striking. The MRObs images can be analysed in the same way as the real  data, with the advantage that only for the MRObs images the underlying  “reality” is known. Comparison of these kinds of simulated and real data  will allow astronomers to test their methods, test how well the  simulations reproduce the actual universe, and make predictions for  future observations.   
  
The MRObs observations allow us to visualize the colours, shapes  and sizes of galaxies as predicted by the simulations in ways that were  previously impossible. In the left panel, galaxies at z~2 are indicated  according to their stellar masses and star formation rates (SFR) as  predicted by the simulations. In the panel on the right, the same  galaxies are plotted, but now they are shown as they would appear in a  simulated HST colour-composite image (with the same quality as recent  data from the GOODS/ERS programme). The diagram on the right contains a  wealth of extra information compared to the standard diagram shown left:  The simulated galaxy population at z~2 consists of a blue star-forming  sequence as well as a population of massive, red and compact galaxies in  which star formation has already shut down, qualitatively similar to  observational findings. The MRObs approach has the advantage of allowing  astronomers to also quantitatively investigate how the properties of  real and simulated galaxies compare.   

Cosmological  simulations aim to capture our current understanding of galaxy  evolution, aid in the interpretation of complex astronomical  observations, and make detailed predictions for future experiments.  Simulations and observations, however, are often compared in a somewhat  indirect way: physical quantities are estimated from the observational  data and compared to the models. An important complication with this  approach is that observations typically give a highly distorted view of  the universe, making the process of extracting physical information a  challenge.

Many  problems in astrophysics could therefore benefit from doing it the  other way round: the entire observing process is applied to the  simulations, so that the models can be viewed fully from an observer’s  perspective. A small team composed of current and former members of the  Max Planck Institute for Astrophysics has now developed the Millennium  Run Observatory (MRObs), a theoretical, virtual observatory that uses  virtual telescopes to ‘observe’ semi-analytic galaxy distributions based  on the MR dark matter simulations developed at MPA. The MRObs produces  data that can be processed and analysed using standard observational  software packages developed for real observations.

See the website for more details: http://www.mpa-garching.mpg.de/mpa/research/current_research/hl2012-11/hl2012-11-en.html(SY)

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