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Katherine Blundell OBE

Professor of Astrophysics

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics
  • Plasma physics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Global Jet Watch
  • Pulsars, transients and relativistic astrophysics
Katherine.Blundell@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73308
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 707
www.GlobalJetWatch.net
orcid.org/0000-0001-8509-4939
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The Global Jet Watch

Radio image of the microquasar SS433
The micro quasar SS433
Link to the site

Evidence that the maximum electron energy in hotspots of FR II galaxies is not determined by synchrotron cooling

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (2016) stw1204-stw1204

Authors:

AT Araudo, AR Bell, A Crilly, KM Blundell
Details from ORA
More details from the publisher
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Details from ArXiV

Evidence that the maximum electron energy in hotspots of FR II galaxies is not determined by synchrotron cooling

(2016)

Authors:

Anabella T Araudo, Anthony R Bell, Aidan Crilly, Katherine M Blundell
More details from the publisher

Detecting edges in the X-ray surface brightness of galaxy clusters

(2016)

Authors:

JS Sanders, AC Fabian, HR Russell, SA Walker, KM Blundell
More details from the publisher

Particle acceleration and magnetic field amplification in hotspots of FR II galaxies: The case study 4C74.26

Argentinian Astronomical Society (2016)

Authors:

Arabella T Araudo, Anthony R Bell, Katherine M Blundell

Abstract:

It has been suggested that relativistic shocks in extragalactic sources may accelerate the most energetic cosmic rays. However, recent theoretical advances indicating that relativistic shocks are probably unable to accelerate particles to energies much larger than a PeV cast doubt on this. In the present contribution we model the radio to X-ray emission in the southern hotspot of the quasar 4C74.26. The synchrotron radio emission is resolved near the shock with the MERLIN radio-interferometer, and the rapid decay of this emission behind the shock is interpreted as the decay of the downstream magnetic field as expected for small scale turbulence. If our result is confirmed by analyses of other radiogalaxies, it provides firm observational evidence that relativistic shocks at the termination region of powerful jets in FR II radiogalaxies do not accelerate ultra high energy cosmic rays.
Details from ORA
Details from ArXiV
More details from the publisher

Particle acceleration and magnetic field amplification in hotspots of FR II galaxies: The case study 4C74.26

(2016)

Authors:

Anabella T Araudo, Anthony R Bell, Katherine M Blundell
More details from the publisher

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