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Relativistic Jet from Black Hole

An artist's impression of a relativistic jet propagating away from a black hole at close to the speed of light. Such jets are formed by the inner regions of the accretion flow: matter flowing inwards towards the black hole, via processes which are not yet fully understood. The accretion flow emits primarily in X-rays, the relativistic jet in the radio band: by combing observations in each band we can try and understand how such jets form and how much energy they carry away from the black hole.

Professor Rob Fender

Professor of Astrophysics

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Hintze Centre for Astrophysical Surveys
  • MeerKAT
  • Pulsars, transients and relativistic astrophysics
  • Rubin-LSST
  • The Square Kilometre Array (SKA)
  • Gamma-ray astronomy
Rob.Fender@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73435
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 712
  • About
  • Publications

About me

I am a Professor of Astrophysics at the University of Oxford.

My particular research interests are in the areas of accretion and feedback around relativistic objects, mostly advanced via observations with radio telescopes such as AMI-LA, e-MERLIN and MeerKAT (although I dabble in many other areas). As well as targeted studies, I am also involved in wide field commensal searches for radio transients. I also do some work on things like population studies and modelling of the phenomena we see.

I was Head of Astrophysics at Oxford from 2019 to 2024. Previously I was Professor of Physics at The University of Southampton, and prior to that Universitair Hoofddocent at the Universiteit van Amsterdam. I have been a Visiting Professor at The University of Grenoble, and since 2010 hold a position as a Visiting Professor at The University of Cape Town.

Amongst other highlights, I led the national collaboration via which the UK joined the LOFAR project, was awarded in 2011 an ERC Advanced Investigator Grant, was chair of the SKA Transients Science Working Group, and was awarded the 2020 Herschel Medal of the Royal Astronomical Society for "investigations of outstanding merit in observational astrophysics", mainly in recognition of my work on accretion around black holes and the connection to relativistic jets. In 2023 I was honoured to collect the RAS Group Achievement Award (A) on behalf of the MeerKAT team.

I am also a recipient of the  Philip Leverhulme Prize, a Marie Curie Fellowship, an NWO VIDI prize, and a Leverhulme Senior Research Fellowship. 

At Oxford I have a large group working on transients and accretion, and am head of the Transients strand of the Hintze Centre for Astrophysical Surveys.

In 2022 I became part of the Einstein Telescope science collaboration (OSB Division 4).

In December 2022 myself, Sera Markoff and Heino Falcke were awarded a 14 MEuro ERC Synergy Grant, 'Blackholistic', to bring together our understanding of black holes on all mass scales. A key component of this project will be the construction of The African Millimetre Telescope (AMT) in Namibia which will both extend dramatically the baseline coverage of the Event Horizon Telescope, and work as a stand-alone transients monitoring facility. Exciting times!

TEDx Talk

I recently did a TEDx talk on why black holes are so fascinating and how there should be many relatively nearby that maybe - just maybe - one day the human race could travel to:

https://youtu.be/TWSBE1-JBrQ

Signing the International LOFAR Telescope agreement on behalf of the UK

Signing the International LOFAR Telescope (ILT) Memorandum of Understanding on behalf of the UK at the formal opening of the telescope (by Queen Beatrix) in June 2010.

Signing the International LOFAR Telescope (ILT) Memorandum of Understanding on behalf of the UK at the formal opening of the telescope (by Queen Beatrix) in June 2010. From left to right: Rene Vermeulen and Mike Garret [representing ASTRON], Ralph-Juergen Dettmar [Germany], Garrelt Mellema [Sweden], Michel Tagger [France], myself [UK], and Ralph Wijers [Dutch Universities]

 

My google scholar link is here: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=zl61mdcAAAAJ (h-index 100)

dog

Dog

To my great and enduring surprise, I have a dog, too.

 

 

Research interests

Radio Astronomy, Accretion and Relativistic Jets

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