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sky and dish

Aris Karastergiou

Professor of Astrophysics and Fellow at St Edmund Hall

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • MeerKAT
  • Pulsars, transients and relativistic astrophysics
  • The Square Kilometre Array (SKA)
  • Gamma-ray astronomy
Aris.Karastergiou@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73642
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 603C
  • About
  • Publications

Wide-band, low-frequency pulse profiles of 100 radio pulsars with LOFAR⋆

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 586 (2016) a92

Authors:

M Pilia, JWT Hessels, BW Stappers, VI Kondratiev, M Kramer, J van Leeuwen, P Weltevrede, AG Lyne, K Zagkouris, TE Hassall, AV Bilous, RP Breton, H Falcke, J-M Grießmeier, E Keane, A Karastergiou, M Kuniyoshi, A Noutsos, S Osłowski, M Serylak, C Sobey, S ter Veen, A Alexov, J Anderson, A Asgekar, IM Avruch, ME Bell, MJ Bentum, G Bernardi, L Bîrzan, A Bonafede, F Breitling, JW Broderick, M Brüggen, B Ciardi, S Corbel, E de Geus, A de Jong, A Deller, S Duscha, J Eislöffel, RA Fallows, R Fender, C Ferrari, W Frieswijk, MA Garrett, AW Gunst, JP Hamaker, G Heald, A Horneffer, P Jonker, E Juette, G Kuper, P Maat, G Mann, S Markoff, R McFadden, D McKay-Bukowski, JCA Miller-Jones, A Nelles, H Paas, M Pandey-Pommier, M Pietka, R Pizzo, AG Polatidis, W Reich, H Röttgering, A Rowlinson, D Schwarz, O Smirnov, M Steinmetz, A Stewart, JD Swinbank, M Tagger, Y Tang, C Tasse, S Thoudam, MC Toribio, AJ van der Horst, R Vermeulen, C Vocks, RJ van Weeren, RAMJ Wijers, R Wijnands, SJ Wijnholds, O Wucknitz, P Zarka
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MeerTime - the MeerKAT Key science program on pulsar timing

Proceedings of Science (2016)

Authors:

M Bailes, E Barr, NDR Bhat, J Brink, S Buchner, M Burgay, F Camilo, DJ Champion, J Hessels, GH Jansseng, A Jameson, S Johnston, A Karastergiou, R Karuppusamy, V Kaspi, MJ Keith, M Kramer, MA McLaughlin, K Moodley, S Oslowski, A Possenti, SM Ransom, FA Rasio, J Sievers, M Serylak, BW Stappers, IH Stairs, G Theureau, W van Straten, P Weltevrede, N Wex

Abstract:

© Copyright owned by the author(s). The MeerKAT telescope represents an outstanding opportunity for radio pulsar timing science with its unique combination of a large collecting area and aperture efficiency (effective area ∼7500 m2), system temperature (T < 20K), high slew speeds (1-2 deg/s), large bandwidths (770 MHz at 20cm wavelengths), southern hemisphere location (latitude ∼ −30◦) and ability to form up to four sub-arrays. The MeerTime project is a five-year program on the MeerKAT array by an international consortium that will regularly time over 1000 radio pulsars to perform tests of relativistic gravity, search for the gravitational wave signature induced by supermassive black hole binaries in the timing residuals of millisecond pulsars, explore the interiors of neutron stars through a pulsar glitch monitoring programme, explore the origin and evolution of binary pulsars, monitor the swarms of pulsars that inhabit globular clusters and monitor radio magnetars. MeerTime will complement the TRAPUM project and time pulsars TRAPUM discovers in surveys of the galactic plane, globular clusters and the galactic centre. In addition to these primary programmes, over 1000 pulsars will have their arrival times monitored and the data made immediately public. The MeerTime pulsar backend comprises two server-class machines each of which possess four Graphics Processing Units. Up to four pulsars can be coherently dedispersed simultaneously up to dispersion measures of over 1000 pc cm−3. All data will be provided in psrfits format. The MeerTime backend will be capable of producing coherently dedispersed filterbank data for timing multiple pulsars in the cores of globular clusters that is useful for pulsar searches of tied array beams. The first real-time pulsar profiles have been obtained as part of the MeerKAT commissioning process, and useful scientific data will start to come online through 2017. All MeerTime data will ultimately be made available for public use, and any published results will include the arrival times and profiles used in the results.

MeerTime - the MeerKAT Key science program on pulsar timing

Proceedings of Science (2016)

Authors:

M Bailes, E Barr, NDR Bhat, J Brink, S Buchner, M Burgay, F Camilo, DJ Champion, J Hessels, GH Jansseng, A Jameson, S Johnston, A Karastergiou, R Karuppusamy, V Kaspi, MJ Keith, M Kramer, MA McLaughlin, K Moodley, S Oslowski, A Possenti, SM Ransom, FA Rasio, J Sievers, M Serylak, BW Stappers, IH Stairs, G Theureau, W van Straten, P Weltevrede, N Wex

Abstract:

The MeerKAT telescope represents an outstanding opportunity for radio pulsar timing science with its unique combination of a large collecting area and aperture efficiency (effective area ∼7500 m2), system temperature (T < 20K), high slew speeds (1-2 deg/s), large bandwidths (770 MHz at 20cm wavelengths), southern hemisphere location (latitude ∼ −30◦) and ability to form up to four sub-arrays. The MeerTime project is a five-year program on the MeerKAT array by an international consortium that will regularly time over 1000 radio pulsars to perform tests of relativistic gravity, search for the gravitational wave signature induced by supermassive black hole binaries in the timing residuals of millisecond pulsars, explore the interiors of neutron stars through a pulsar glitch monitoring programme, explore the origin and evolution of binary pulsars, monitor the swarms of pulsars that inhabit globular clusters and monitor radio magnetars. MeerTime will complement the TRAPUM project and time pulsars TRAPUM discovers in surveys of the galactic plane, globular clusters and the galactic centre. In addition to these primary programmes, over 1000 pulsars will have their arrival times monitored and the data made immediately public. The MeerTime pulsar backend comprises two server-class machines each of which possess four Graphics Processing Units. Up to four pulsars can be coherently dedispersed simultaneously up to dispersion measures of over 1000 pc cm−3. All data will be provided in psrfits format. The MeerTime backend will be capable of producing coherently dedispersed filterbank data for timing multiple pulsars in the cores of globular clusters that is useful for pulsar searches of tied array beams. The first real-time pulsar profiles have been obtained as part of the MeerKAT commissioning process, and useful scientific data will start to come online through 2017. All MeerTime data will ultimately be made available for public use, and any published results will include the arrival times and profiles used in the results.

A LOFAR census of millisecond pulsars

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 585 (2016) a128

Authors:

VI Kondratiev, JPW Verbiest, JWT Hessels, AV Bilous, BW Stappers, M Kramer, EF Keane, A Noutsos, S Osłowski, RP Breton, TE Hassall, A Alexov, S Cooper, H Falcke, J-M Grießmeier, A Karastergiou, M Kuniyoshi, M Pilia, C Sobey, S ter Veen, J van Leeuwen, P Weltevrede, ME Bell, JW Broderick, S Corbel, J Eislöffel, S Markoff, A Rowlinson, JD Swinbank, RAMJ Wijers, R Wijnands, P Zarka
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Emission-rotation correlation in pulsars: new discoveries with optimal techniques

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 456:2 (2015) 1374-1393

Authors:

PR Brook, Aris Karastergiou, S Johnston, M Kerr, RM Shannon, Stephen Roberts

Abstract:

Pulsars are known to display short-term variability. Recently, examples of longer term emission variability have emerged that are often correlated with changes in the rotational properties of the pulsar. To further illuminate this relationship, we have developed techniques to identify emission and rotation variability in pulsar data, and determine correlations between the two. Individual observations may be too noisy to identify subtle changes in the pulse profile. We use Gaussian process (GP) regression to model noisy observations and produce a continuous map of pulse profile variability. Generally, multiple observing epochs are required to obtain the pulsar spin frequency derivative (ν). GP regression is, therefore, also used to obtain ν, under the hypothesis that pulsar timing noise is primarily caused by unmodelled changes in ν. Our techniques distinguish between two types of variability: changes in the total flux density versus changes in the pulse shape. We have applied these techniques to 168 pulsars observed by the Parkes radio telescope, and see that although variations in flux density are ubiquitous, substantial changes in the shape of the pulse profile are rare.We reproduce previously published results and present examples of profile shape changing in seven pulsars; in particular, a clear new example of correlated changes in profile shape and rotation is found in PSR J1602-5100. In the shape changing pulsars, a more complex picture than the previously proposed two state model emerges. We conclude that our simple assumption that all timing noise can be interpreted as ν variability is insufficient to explain our data set.
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