VINTERGATAN-GM: How do mergers affect the satellite populations of MW-like galaxies?

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 528:2 (2024) 2346-2357

Authors:

Gandhali D Joshi, Andrew Pontzen, Oscar Agertz, Martin P Rey, Justin Read, Florent Renaud

Widespread AGN feedback in a forming brightest cluster galaxy at $z=4.1$ unveiled by JWST

ArXiv 2401.12199 (2024)

Authors:

Aayush Saxena, Roderik A Overzier, Montserrat Villar-Martín, Tim Heckman, Namrata Roy, Kenneth J Duncan, Huub Röttgering, George Miley, Catarina Aydar, Philip Best, Sarah EI Bosman, Alex J Cameron, Krisztina Éva Gabányi, Andrew Humphrey, Sandy Morais, Masafusa Onoue, Laura Pentericci, Victoria Reynaldi, Bram Venemans

The Simons Observatory: beam characterization for the small aperture telescopes

Astrophysical Journal IOP Publishing 961:1 (2024) 138

Authors:

Nadia Dachlythra, Adriaan J Duivenvoorden, Jon E Gudmundsson, Matthew Hasselfield, Gabriele Coppi, Alexandre E Adler, David Alonso, Susanna Azzoni, Grace E Chesmore, Giulio Fabbian, Ken Ganga, Remington G Gerras, Andrew H Jaffe, Bradley R Johnson, Brian Keating, Reijo Keskitalo, Theodore S Kisner, Nicoletta Krachmalnicoff, Marius Lungu, Frederick Matsuda, Sigurd Naess, Lyman Page, Roberto Puddu, Giuseppe Puglisi, Sara M Simon, Grant Teply, Tran Tsan, Edward J Wollack, Kevin Wolz, Zhilei Xu

Abstract:

We use time-domain simulations of Jupiter observations to test and develop a beam reconstruction pipeline for the Simons Observatory Small Aperture Telescopes. The method relies on a mapmaker that estimates and subtracts correlated atmospheric noise and a beam fitting code designed to compensate for the bias caused by the mapmaker. We test our reconstruction performance for four different frequency bands against various algorithmic parameters, atmospheric conditions, and input beams. We additionally show the reconstruction quality as a function of the number of available observations and investigate how different calibration strategies affect the beam uncertainty. For all of the cases considered, we find good agreement between the fitted results and the input beam model within an ∼1.5% error for a multipole range  = 30–700 and an ∼0.5% error for a multipole range  = 50–200. We conclude by using a harmonic-domain component separation algorithm to verify that the beam reconstruction errors and biases observed in our analysis do not significantly bias the Simons Observatory r-measurement

The Great Escape: Understanding the Connection Between Ly$\alpha$ Emission and LyC Escape in Simulated JWST Analogues

(2024)

Authors:

Nicholas Choustikov, Harley Katz, Aayush Saxena, Thibault Garel, Julien Devriendt, Adrianne Slyz, Taysun Kimm, Jeremy Blaizot, Joki Rosdahl

MIGHTEE polarization early science fields: the deep polarized sky

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 528:2 (2024) 2511-2522

Authors:

Andrew R Taylor, Srikrishna Sekhar, Lennart Heino, Anna MM Scaife, Jeroen Stil, Micah Bowles, Matt Jarvis, Ian Heywood, Jordan D Collier

Abstract:

The MeerKAT International GigaHertz Tiered Extragalactic Exploration (MIGHTEE) is one of the MeerKAT large survey projects, designed to pathfind SKA key science. MIGHTEE is undertaking deep radio imaging of four well-observed fields (COSMOS, XMM-LSS, ELAIS S1, and CDFS) totaling 20 square degrees to μJy sensitivities. Broad-band imaging observations between 880 and1690 MHz yield total intensity continuum, spectro-polarimetry, and atomic hydrogen spectral imaging. Early science data from MIGHTEE are being released from initial observations of COSMOS and XMM–LSS. This paper describes the spectro-polarimetric observations, the polarization data processing of the MIGHTEE early science fields, and presents polarization data images and catalogues. The catalogues include radio spectral index, redshift information, and Faraday rotation measure synthesis results for 13 267 total intensity radio sources down to a polarized intensity detection limit of ∼20 μJy bm−1. Polarized signals were detected from 324 sources. For the polarized detections, we include a catalogue of Faraday Depth from both Faraday Synthesis and Q, U fitting, as well as total intensity and polarization spectral indices. The distribution of redshift of the total radio sources and detected polarized sources are the same, with median redshifts of 0.86 and 0.82, respectively. Depolarization of the emission at longer-wavelengths is seen to increase with decreasing total-intensity spectral index, implying that depolarization is intrinsic to the radio sources. No evidence is seen for a redshift dependence of the variance of Faraday depth.