MUSE observations of M87: radial gradients for the stellar initial-mass function and the abundance of sodium

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 478:3 (2018) 4084-4100

Authors:

Marc Sarzi, Chiara Spiniello, Francesco La Barbera, Davor Krajnović, Remco van den Bosch

SN 2017ens: The Metamorphosis of a Luminous Broad-lined Type Ic Supernova into an SN IIn

(2018)

Authors:

T-W Chen, C Inserra, M Fraser, TJ Moriya, P Schady, T Schweyer, AV Filippenko, DA Perley, AJ Ruiter, I Seitenzahl, J Sollerman, F Taddia, JP Anderson, RJ Foley, A Jerkstrand, C-C Ngeow, Y-C Pan, A Pastorello, S Points, SJ Smartt, KW Smith, S Taubenberger, P Wiseman, DR Young, S Benetti, M Berton, F Bufano, P Clark, M Della Valle, L Galbany, A Gal-Yam, M Gromadzki, CP Gutiérrez, A Heinze, E Kankare, CD Kilpatrick, H Kuncarayakti, G Leloudas, Z-Y Lin, K Maguire, P Mazzali, O McBrien, SJ Prentice, A Rau, A Rest, MR Siebert, B Stalder, JL Tonry, P-C Yu

The far-infrared radio correlation at low radio frequency with LOFAR/H-ATLAS

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 480:4 (2018) 5625-5644

Authors:

SC Read, DJB Smith, G Gürkan, MJ Hardcastle, WL Williams, PN Best, E Brinks, G Calistro-Rivera, KT Chyzy, K Duncan, L Dunne, Matthew Jarvis, Leah K Morabito, I Prandoni, HJA Röttgering, J Sabater, S Viaene

Abstract:

The radio and far-infrared luminosities of star-forming galaxies are tightly correlated over several orders of magnitude; this is known as the far-infrared radio correlation (FIRC). Previous studies have shown that a host of factors conspire to maintain a tight and linear FIRC, despite many models predicting deviation. This discrepancy between expectations and observations is concerning since a linear FIRC underpins the use of radio luminosity as a star-formation rate indicator. Using LOFAR 150MHz , FIRST 1.4GHz , and Herschel  infrared luminosities derived from the new LOFAR/H-ATLAS catalogue, we investigate possible variation in the monochromatic ( 250μm) FIRC at low and high radio frequencies. We use statistical techniques to probe the FIRC for an optically selected sample of 4082 emission-line classified star-forming galaxies as a function of redshift, effective dust temperature, stellar mass, specific star formation rate, and mid-infrared colour (an empirical proxy for specific star formation rate). Although the average FIRC at high radio frequency is consistent with expectations based on a standard power-law radio spectrum, the average correlation at 150MHz is not. We see evidence for redshift evolution of the FIRC at 150MHz⁠, and find that the FIRC varies with stellar mass, dust temperature, and specific star formation rate, whether the latter is probed using MAGPHYS fitting, or using mid-infrared colour as a proxy. We can explain the variation, to within 1σ, seen in the FIRC over mid-infrared colour by a combination of dust temperature, redshift, and stellar mass using a Bayesian partial correlation technique.

SPIRITS 16tn in NGC 3556: A Heavily Obscured and Low-luminosity Supernova at 8.8 Mpc

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 863:1 (2018) 20

Authors:

Jacob E Jencson, Mansi M Kasliwal, Scott M Adams, Howard E Bond, Ryan M Lau, Joel Johansson, Assaf Horesh, Kunal P Mooley, Robert Fender, Kishalay De, Dónal O’Sullivan, Frank J Masci, Ann Marie Cody, Nadia Blagorodnova, Ori D Fox, Robert D Gehrz, Peter A Milne, Daniel A Perley, Nathan Smith, Schuyler D Van Dyk

PS18kh: A New Tidal Disruption Event with a Non-Axisymmetric Accretion Disk

(2018)

Authors:

TW-S Holoien, ME Huber, BJ Shappee, M Eracleous, K Auchettl, JS Brown, MA Tucker, KC Chambers, CS Kochanek, KZ Stanek, A Rest, D Bersier, RS Post, G Aldering, KA Ponder, JD Simon, E Kankare, D Dong., G Hallinan, NA Reddy, RL Sanders, MW Topping, J Bulger, TB Lowe, EA Magnier, ASB Schultz, CZ Waters, M Willman, D Wright, DR Young, Subo Dong, JL Prieto, Todd A Thompson, L Denneau, H Flewelling, AN Heinze, SJ Smartt, KW Smith, B Stalder, JL Tonry, H Weiland