Cosmology with SKA radio continuum surveys

Proceedings of Science Sissa Medialab srl (2015)

Authors:

Matthew Jarvis, David Bacon, Chris Blake, Michael L Brown, Sam N Lindsay, Alvise Raccanelli, Mario Santos, Dominik Schwarz

Abstract:

Radio continuum surveys have, in the past, been of restricted use in cosmology. Most studies have concentrated on cross-correlations with the cosmic microwave background to detect the integrated Sachs-Wolfe effect, due to the large sky areas that can be surveyed. As we move into the SKA era, radio continuum surveys will have sufficient source density and sky area to play a major role in cosmology on the largest scales. In this chapter we summarise the experiments that can be carried out with the SKA as it is built up through the coming decade. We show that the SKA can play a unique role in constraining the non-Gaussianity parameter to \sigma(f_NL) ~ 1, and provide a unique handle on the systematics that inhibit weak lensing surveys. The SKA will also provide the necessary data to test the isotropy of the Universe at redshifts of order unity and thus evaluate the robustness of the cosmological principle.Thus, SKA continuum surveys will turn radio observations into a central probe of cosmological research in the coming decades.

Fast Transients at Cosmological Distances with the SKA

Sissa Medialab Srl (2015) 055

Authors:

Jean-Pierre Macquart, Evan Keane, K Grainge, Matthew McQuinn, Rob Fender, Jason Hessels, Adam Deller, Ramesh Bhat, Rene Breton, Shami Chatterjee, Casey Law, Duncan Lorimer, Eran Oded Ofek, Malgorzata Pietka, Laura Spitler, Ben Stappers, Cathryn Trott

Identifying the first generation of radio powerful AGN in the Universe with the SKA

Proceedings of Science Sissa Medialab srl (2015)

Authors:

Jose Afonso, Jordi Casanellas, Isabella Prandoni, Matthew Jarvis, Silvio Lorenzoni, Manuela Magliocchetti, Nick Seymour

Abstract:

One of the most challenging and exciting subjects in modern astrophysics is that of galaxy formation at the epoch of reionisation. The SKA, with its revolutionary capabilities in terms of frequency range, resolution and sensitivity, will allow to explore the first Gyr of structure formation in the Universe, in particular, with the detection and study of the earliest manifestations of the AGN phenomenon. The tens of QSOs that are currently known out to the highest redshifts (z~7), many of them exhibiting powerful radio emission, imply that super-massive black holes can be grown on a very short timescale and support the existence of very high redshift (z > 7) radio loud sources - sources that have so far escaped detection. Not only would such detections be paramount to the understanding of the earliest stages of galaxy evolution, they are necessary for the direct study of neutral hydrogen in the Epoch of Reionisation, through observations of the HI 21cm forest against such background sources. In order to understand how SKA and SKA1 observations can be optimised to reveal these earliest AGN, we have examined the effect of a hot CMB on the emission of powerful and young radio galaxies. By looking at the SKA1 capabilities, in particular in terms of wavelength coverage and resolution, we determine how the effects of "CMB-muting" of a radio loud source can be observationally minimised and how to identify the best highest-redshift radio candidates. Considering different predictions for the space density of radio loud AGN at such redshifts, we identify the survey characteristics necessary to optimize the detection and identification of the very first generation of radio loud AGN in the Universe.

Incoherent transient radio emission from stellar-mass compact objects in the SKA era

Sissa Medialab Srl (2015) 053

Authors:

Stephane Corbel, James CA Miller-Jones, Rob Fender, Elena Gallo, Thomas Maccarone, Tim O'Brien, Zsolt Paragi, Michael Rupen, Anthony Rushton, Sabina Sabatini, Gregory Sivakoff, Jay Strader, Patrick Alan Woudt

Multiple supermassive black hole systems: SKA’s future leading role

Proceedings of Science Sissa Medialab srl (2015)

Authors:

Roger Deane, Zsolt Paragi, Matthew Jarvis, Mickäel Coriat, Gianni Bernardi, Sandor Frey, Ian Heywood, Hans-Reiner Klöckner

Abstract:

Galaxies and supermassive black holes (SMBHs) are believed to evolve through a process of hierarchical merging and accretion. Through this paradigm, multiple SMBH systems are expected to be relatively common in the Universe. However, to date there are poor observational constraints on multiple SMBHs systems with separations comparable to a SMBH gravitational sphere of influence (<< 1 kpc). In this chapter, we discuss how deep continuum observations with the SKA will make leading contributions towards understanding how multiple black hole systems impact galaxy evolution. In addition, these observations will provide constraints on and an understanding of stochastic gravitational wave background detections in the pulsar timing array sensitivity band (nanoHz -microHz). We also discuss how targets for pointed gravitational wave experiments (that cannot be resolved by VLBI) could potentially be found using the large-scale radio-jet morphology, which can be modulated by the presence of a close-pair binary SMBH system. The combination of direct imaging at high angular resolution; low-surface brightness radio-jet tracers; and pulsar timing arrays will allow the SKA to trace black hole binary evolution from separations of a galaxy virial radius down to the sub-parsec level. This large dynamic range in binary SMBH separation will ensure that the SKA plays a leading role in this observational frontier.