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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 Aayush Saxena

Postdoctoral Research Assistant

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Cosmology
  • Galaxy formation and evolution
aayush.saxena@physics.ox.ac.uk
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 558
Aayush Saxena's website
  • About
  • Publications

Optical detection of a GMRT-detected candidate high-redshift radio galaxy with 3.6-m Devasthal optical telescope

Journal of Astrophysics and Astronomy Springer Nature 40:2 (2019) 9

Authors:

A Omar, A Saxena, K Chand, A Paswan, HJA Röttgering, KJ Duncan, TS Kumar, B Krishnareddy, J Pant
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The LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey: II. First data release

Astronomy and Astrophysics EDP Sciences 622 (2019) A1

Authors:

TW Shimwell, C Tasse, MJ Hardcastle, AP Mechev, WL Williams, PN Best, HJA Röttgering, Matthew J Jarvis, Leah K Morabito, Catherine L Hale

Abstract:

The LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) is an ongoing sensitive, high-resolution 120–168 MHz survey of the entire northern sky for which observations are now 20% complete. We present our first full-quality public data release. For this data release 424 square degrees, or 2% of the eventual coverage, in the region of the HETDEX Spring Field (right ascension 10h45m00s to 15h30m00s and declination 45°00′00″ to 57°00′00″) were mapped using a fully automated direction-dependent calibration and imaging pipeline that we developed. A total of 325 694 sources are detected with a signal of at least five times the noise, and the source density is a factor of ∼10 higher than the most sensitive existing very wide-area radio-continuum surveys. The median sensitivity is S144 MHz = 71 μJy beam−1 and the point-source completeness is 90% at an integrated flux density of 0.45 mJy. The resolution of the images is 6″ and the positional accuracy is within 0.2″. This data release consists of a catalogue containing location, flux, and shape estimates together with 58 mosaic images that cover the catalogued area. In this paper we provide an overview of the data release with a focus on the processing of the LOFAR data and the characteristics of the resulting images. In two accompanying papers we provide the radio source associations and deblending and, where possible, the optical identifications of the radio sources together with the photometric redshifts and properties of the host galaxies. These data release papers are published together with a further ∼20 articles that highlight the scientific potential of LoTSS.
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The LoTSS view of radio AGN in the local Universe: the most massive galaxies are always switched on

Astronomy and Astrophysics EDP Sciences 622 (2019) A17

Authors:

J Sabater, PN Best, MJ Hardcastle, TW Shimwell, C Tasse, WL Williams, M Brüggen, RK Cochrane, JH Croston, F de Gasperin, KJ Duncan, G Gürkan, AP Mechev, Leah K Morabito, I Prandoni, HJA Röttgering, DJB Smith, JJ Harwood, B Mingo, S Mooney, A Saxena

Abstract:

This paper presents a study of the local radio source population, by cross-comparing the data from the first data release (DR1) of the LOFAR Two-Metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) DR7 main galaxy spectroscopic sample. The LoTSS DR1 provides deep data (median rms noise of 71 μJy at 150 MHz) over 424 square degrees of sky, which is sufficient to detect 10 615 (32 per cent) of the SDSS galaxies over this sky area. An improved method to separate active galactic nuclei (AGN) accurately from sources with radio emission powered by star formation (SF) is developed and applied, leading to a sample of 2121 local (z < 0.3) radio AGN. The local 150 MHz luminosity function is derived for radio AGN and SF galaxies separately, and the good agreement with previous studies at 1.4 GHz suggests that the separation method presented is robust. The prevalence of radio AGN activity is confirmed to show a strong dependence on both stellar and black hole masses, remarkably reaching a fraction of 100 per cent of the most massive galaxies (> 1011 M⊙) displaying radio-AGN activity with L150 MHz ≥ 1021 W Hz−1; thus, the most massive galaxies are always switched on at some level. The results allow the full Eddington-scaled accretion rate distribution (a proxy for the duty cycle) to be probed for massive galaxies, and this accretion rate is found to peak at Lmech/LEdd ≈ 10−5. More than 50 per cent of the energy is released during the ≤2 per cent of the time spent at the highest accretion rates, Lmech/LEdd > 10−2.5. Stellar mass is shown to be a more important driver of radio-AGN activity than black hole mass, suggesting a possible connection between the fuelling gas and the surrounding halo. This result is in line with models in which these radio AGN are essential for maintaining the quenched state of galaxies at the centres of hot gas haloes.
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Discovery of a radio galaxy at z = 5.72

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 480:2 (2018) 2733-2742

Authors:

A Saxena, M Marinello, RA Overzier, PN Best, HJA Röttgering, KJ Duncan, I Prandoni, L Pentericci, M Magliocchetti, D Paris, F Cusano, F Marchi, HT Intema, GK Miley
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High-redshift radio galaxies at low radio frequencies

ArXiv 1810.08119 (2018)

Authors:

A Saxena, HJA Rottgering
Details from ArXiV

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