Functional Regression for Quasar Spectra [CL]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1404.3168


The Lyman-alpha forest is a portion of the observed light spectrum of distant galactic nuclei which allows us to probe remote regions of the Universe that are otherwise inaccessible. The observed Lyman-alpha forest of a quasar light spectrum can be modeled as a noisy realization of a smooth curve that is affected by a `damping effect’ which occurs whenever the light emitted by the quasar travels through regions of the Universe with higher matter concentration. To decode the information conveyed by the Lyman-alpha forest about the matter distribution, we must be able to separate the smooth `continuum’ from the noise and the contribution of the damping effect in the quasar light spectra. To predict the continuum in the Lyman-alpha forest, we use a nonparametric functional regression model in which both the response and the predictor variable (the smooth part of the damping-free portion of the spectrum) are function-valued random variables. We demonstrate that the proposed method accurately predicts the unobservable continuum in the Lyman-alpha forest both on simulated spectra and real spectra. Also, we introduce distribution-free prediction bands for the nonparametric functional regression model that have finite sample guarantees. These prediction bands, together with bootstrap-based confidence bands for the projection of the mean continuum on a fixed number of principal components, allow us to assess the degree of uncertainty in the model predictions.

Read this paper on arXiv…

M. Ciollaro, J. Cisewski, P. Freeman, et. al.
Mon, 14 Apr 14
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