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Black Hole

Lensing of space time around a black hole. At Oxford we study black holes observationally and theoretically on all size and time scales - it is some of our core work.

Credit: ALAIN RIAZUELO, IAP/UPMC/CNRS. CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE IMAGES.

Dr Alex Andersson

Postdoctoral Fellow

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Zooniverse
  • MeerKAT
  • Pulsars, transients and relativistic astrophysics
  • Rubin-LSST
  • The Square Kilometre Array (SKA)
  • Breakthrough Listen
alexander.andersson@physics.ox.ac.uk
  • About
  • Publications

Anomaly Detection and RFI Classification with Unsupervised Learning in Narrowband Radio Technosignature Searches

ArXiv 2411.16556 (2024)

Authors:

Ben Jacobson-Bell, Steve Croft, Carmen Choza, Alex Andersson, Daniel Bautista, Vishal Gajjar, Matthew Lebofsky, David HE MacMahon, Caleb Painter, Andrew PV Siemion
Details from ArXiV

Finding radio transients with anomaly detection and active learning based on volunteer classifications

(2024)

Authors:

Alex Andersson, Chris Lintott, Rob Fender, Michelle Lochner, Patrick Woudt, Jakob van den Eijnden, Alexander van der Horst, Assaf Horesh, Payaswini Saikia, Gregory R Sivakoff, Lilia Tremou, Mattia Vaccari
More details from the publisher
Details from ArXiV

A Radio Flare in the Long-lived Afterglow of the Distant Short GRB 210726A: Energy Injection or a Reverse Shock from Shell Collisions?

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 970:2 (2024) 139

Authors:

Genevieve Schroeder, Lauren Rhodes, Tanmoy Laskar, Anya Nugent, Alicia Rouco Escorial, Jillian C Rastinejad, Wen-fai Fong, Alexander J van der Horst, Péter Veres, Kate D Alexander, Alex Andersson, Edo Berger, Peter K Blanchard, Sarah Chastain, Lise Christensen, Rob Fender, David A Green, Paul Groot, Ian Heywood, Assaf Horesh, Luca Izzo, Charles D Kilpatrick, Elmar Körding, Amy Lien

Abstract:

We present the discovery of the radio afterglow of the short gamma-ray burst (GRB) 210726A, localized to a galaxy at a photometric redshift of z ∼ 2.4. While radio observations commenced ≲1 day after the burst, no radio emission was detected until ∼11 days. The radio afterglow subsequently brightened by a factor of ∼3 in the span of a week, followed by a rapid decay (a “radio flare”). We find that a forward shock afterglow model cannot self-consistently describe the multiwavelength X-ray and radio data, and underpredicts the flux of the radio flare by a factor of ≈5. We find that the addition of substantial energy injection, which increases the isotropic kinetic energy of the burst by a factor of ≈4, or a reverse shock from a shell collision are viable solutions to match the broadband behavior. At z ∼ 2.4, GRB 210726A is among the highest-redshift short GRBs discovered to date, as well as the most luminous in radio and X-rays. Combining and comparing all previous radio afterglow observations of short GRBs, we find that the majority of published radio searches conclude by ≲10 days after the burst, potentially missing these late-rising, luminous radio afterglows.
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Discovery of the Optical and Radio Counterpart to the Fast X-Ray Transient EP 240315a

The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 969:1 (2024) L14

Authors:

JH Gillanders, L Rhodes, S Srivastav, F Carotenuto, J Bright, ME Huber, HF Stevance, SJ Smartt, KC Chambers, T-W Chen, R Fender, A Andersson, AJ Cooper, PG Jonker, FJ Cowie, T de Boer, N Erasmus, MD Fulton, H Gao, J Herman, C-C Lin, T Lowe, EA Magnier, H-Y Miao

Abstract:

Fast X-ray Transients (FXTs) are extragalactic bursts of soft X-rays first identified ≳10 yr ago. Since then, nearly 40 events have been discovered, although almost all of these have been recovered from archival Chandra and XMM-Newton data. To date, optical sky surveys and follow-up searches have not revealed any multiwavelength counterparts. The Einstein Probe, launched in 2024 January, has started surveying the sky in the soft X-ray regime (0.5–4 keV) and will rapidly increase the sample of FXTs discovered in real time. Here we report the first discovery of both an optical and radio counterpart to a distant FXT, the fourth source publicly released by the Einstein Probe. We discovered a fast-fading optical transient within the 3′ localization radius of EP 240315a with the all-sky optical survey ATLAS, and our follow-up Gemini spectrum provides a redshift, z = 4.859 ± 0.002. Furthermore, we uncovered a radio counterpart in the S band (3.0 GHz) with the MeerKAT radio interferometer. The optical (rest-frame UV) and radio luminosities indicate that the FXT most likely originates from either a long gamma-ray burst or a relativistic tidal disruption event. This may be a fortuitous early mission detection by the Einstein Probe or may signpost a mode of discovery for high-redshift, high-energy transients through soft X-ray surveys, combined with locating multiwavelength counterparts.
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A new method for short-duration transient detection in radio images: searching for transient sources in MeerKAT data of NGC 5068

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 528:4 (2024) 6985-6996

Authors:

S Fijma, A Rowlinson, RAMJ Wijers, I de Ruiter, WJG de Blok, S Chastain, AJ van der Horst, ZS Meyers, K van der Meulen, R Fender, PA Woudt, A Andersson, A Zijlstra, J Healy, FM Maccagni
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