GREENBURST: A commensal Fast Radio Burst search back-end for the Green Bank Telescope
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia Cambridge University Press 36 (2019) e032
Abstract:
We describe the design and deployment of GREENBURST, a commensal Fast Radio Burst (FRB) search system at the Green Bank Telescope. GREENBURST uses the dedicated L-band receiver tap to search over the 960$-$1920 MHz frequency range for pulses with dispersion measures out to $10^4$ pc cm$^{-3}$. Due to its unique design, GREENBURST will obtain data even when the L-band receiver is not being used for scheduled observing. This makes it a sensitive single pixel detector capable of reaching deeper in the radio sky. While single pulses from Galactic pulsars and rotating radio transients will be detectable in our observations, and will form part of the database we archive, the primary goal is to detect and study FRBs. Based on recent determinations of the all-sky rate, we predict that the system will detect approximately one FRB for every 2$-$3 months of continuous operation. The high sensitivity of GREENBURST means that it will also be able to probe the slope of the FRB source function, which is currently uncertain in this observing band.Chandra reveals a possible ultrafast outflow in the super-Eddington Be/X-ray binary Swift J0243.6+6124
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 487:3 (2019) 4355-4371
Understanding the radio beam of PSR J1136+1551 through its single pulses
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 489:1 (2019) 310-324
Abstract:
The frequency widening of pulsar profiles is commonly attributed to lower frequencies being produced at greater heights above the surface of the pulsar; so-called radius-to-frequency mapping (RFM). The observer’s view of pulsar emission is a 1D cut through a 3D magnetosphere: we can only see that emission which points along our line of sight. However, by comparing the frequency evolution of many single pulses positioned at different phases, we can build up an understanding of the shape of the active emission region. We use single pulses observed with the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope to investigate the emission region of PSR J1136+1551 and test RFM. Assuming that emission is produced tangential to the magnetic field lines and that each emission frequency corresponds to a single height, we simulate the single pulse profile evolution resulting from the canonical conal beam model and a fan beam model. Comparing the results of these simulations with the observations, we conclude that the emission region of PSR J1136+1551 is better described by the fan beam model. The diversity of profile widening behaviour observed for the single pulses can be explained by orthogonally polarized modes propagating along differing frequency-dependent paths in the magnetosphere.WALLABY early science - III. An HI study of the spiral galaxy NGC 1566
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 487:2 (2019) 2797-2817
Abstract:
This paper reports on the atomic hydrogen gas (H I) observations of the spiral galaxy NGC 1566 using the newly commissioned Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder radio telescope. We measure an integrated H I flux density of 180.2 Jy km s−1 emanating from this galaxy, which translates to an H I mass of 1.94×1010M⊙ at an assumed distance of 21.3 Mpc. Our observations show that NGC 1566 has an asymmetric and mildly warped H I disc. The H I-to-stellar mass fraction (MHI/M∗) of NGC 1566 is 0.29, which is high in comparison with galaxies that have the same stellar mass (1010.8 M⊙). We also derive the rotation curve of this galaxy to a radius of 50 kpc and fit different mass models to it. The NFW, Burkert, and pseudo-isothermal dark matter halo profiles fit the observed rotation curve reasonably well and recover dark matter fractions of 0.62, 0.58, and 0.66, respectively. Down to the column density sensitivity of our observations (NHI=3.7×1019 cm−2), we detect no H I clouds connected to, or in the nearby vicinity of, the H I disc of NGC 1566 nor nearby interacting systems. We conclude that, based on a simple analytic model, ram pressure interactions with the IGM can affect the H I disc of NGC 1566 and is possibly the reason for the asymmetries seen in the H I morphology of NGC 1566.Hot, dense He II outflows during the 2017 outburst of the X-ray transient Swift J1357.2−0933
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters Oxford University Press 489:1 (2019) L47-L52