X-Ray and Radio Monitoring of the Neutron Star Low-mass X-Ray Binary 1A 1744-361: Quasiperiodic Oscillations, Transient Ejections, and a Disk Atmosphere

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 966:2 (2024) 232

Authors:

Mason Ng, Andrew K Hughes, Jeroen Homan, Jon M Miller, Sean N Pike, Diego Altamirano, Peter Bult, Deepto Chakrabarty, DJK Buisson, Benjamin M Coughenour, Rob Fender, Sebastien Guillot, Tolga Güver, Gaurava K Jaisawal, Amruta D Jaodand, Christian Malacaria, James CA Miller-Jones, Andrea Sanna, Gregory R Sivakoff, Tod E Strohmayer, John A Tomsick, Jakob van den Eijnden

Abstract:

We report on X-ray (NICER/NuSTAR/MAXI/Swift) and radio (MeerKAT) timing and spectroscopic analysis from a 3 month monitoring campaign in 2022 of a high-intensity outburst of the dipping neutron star low-mass X-ray binary 1A 1744−361. The 0.5–6.8 keV NICER X-ray hardness–intensity and color–color diagrams of the observations throughout the outburst suggest that 1A 1744−361 spent most of its outburst in an atoll-state, but we show that the source exhibited Z-state-like properties at the peak of the outburst, similar to a small sample of other atoll-state sources. A timing analysis with NICER data revealed several instances of an ≈8 Hz quasiperiodic oscillation (QPO; fractional rms amplitudes of ∼5%) around the peak of the outburst, the first from this source, which we connect to the normal branch QPOs seen in the Z-state. Our observations of 1A 1744−361 are fully consistent with the idea of the mass accretion rate being the main distinguishing parameter between atoll- and Z-states. Radio monitoring data by MeerKAT suggests that the source was at its radio-brightest during the outburst peak, and that the source transitioned from the “island” spectral state to the “banana” state within ∼3 days of the outburst onset, launching transient jet ejecta. The observations present the strongest evidence for radio flaring, including jet ejecta, during the island-to-banana spectral state transition at low accretion rates (atoll-state). The source also exhibited Fe xxv, Fe xxvi Kα, and Kβ X-ray absorption lines, whose origins likely lie in an accretion disk atmosphere.

The Thousand-Pulsar-Array programme on MeerKAT – XIV. On the high linearly polarized pulsar signals

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 530:4 (2024) 4839-4849

Authors:

Simon Johnston, Dipanjan Mitra, Michael J Keith, Lucy S Oswald, Aris Karastergiou

Constraints on the origin of the radio synchrotron background via angular correlations

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 530:3 (2024) 2994-3004

Authors:

Elisa Todarello, Marco Regis, Federico Bianchini, Jack Singal, Enzo Branchini, Fraser J Cowie, Sean Heston, Shunsaku Horiuchi, Danielle Lucero, Andre Offringa

Abstract:

ABSTRACT The origin of the radio synchrotron background (RSB) is currently unknown. Its understanding might have profound implications in fundamental physics or might reveal a new class of radio emitters. In this work, we consider the scenario in which the RSB is due to extragalactic radio sources and measure the angular cross-correlation of Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) images of the diffuse radio sky with matter tracers at different redshifts, provided by galaxy catalogues and cosmic microwave background lensing. We compare these measured cross-correlations to those expected for models of RSB sources. We find that low-redshift populations of discrete sources are excluded by the data, while higher redshift explanations are compatible with available observations. We also conclude that at least 20 per cent of the RSB surface brightness level must originate from populations tracing the large-scale distribution of matter in the Universe, indicating that at least this fraction of the RSB is of extragalactic origin. Future measurements of the correlation between the RSB and tracers of high-redshift sources will be crucial to constraining the source population of the RSB.

The fast X-ray transient EP240315a: a z ~ 5 gamma-ray burst in a Lyman continuum leaking galaxy

(2024)

Authors:

Andrew J Levan, Peter G Jonker, Andrea Saccardi, Daniele Bjørn Malesani, Nial R Tanvir, Luca Izzo, Kasper E Heintz, Daniel Mata Sánchez, Jonathan Quirola-Vásquez, Manuel AP Torres, Susanna D Vergani, Steve Schulze, Andrea Rossi, Paolo D'Avanzo, Benjamin Gompertz, Antonio Martin-Carrillo, Antonio de Ugarte Postigo, Benjamin Schneider, Weimin Yuan, Zhixing Ling, Wenjie Zhang, Xuan Mao, Yuan Liu, Hui Sun, Dong Xu, Zipei Zhu, José Feliciano Agüí Fernández, Lorenzo Amati, Franz E Bauer, Sergio Campana, Francesco Carotenuto, Ashley Chrimes, Joyce ND van Dalen, Valerio D'Elia, Massimo Della Valle, Massimiliano De Pasquale, Vikram S Dhillon, Lluís Galbany, Nicola Gaspari, Giulia Gianfagna, Andreja Gomboc, Nusrin Habeeb, Agnes PC van Hoof, Youdong Hu, Pall Jakobsson, Yashaswi Julakanti, Judith Korth, Chryssa Kouveliotou, Tanmoy Laskar, Stuart P Littlefair, Elisabetta Maiorano, Jirong Mao, Andrea Melandri, M Coleman Miller, Tamal Mukherjee, Samantha R Oates, Paul O'Brien, Jesse T Palmerio, Hannu Parviainen, Daniëlle LA Pieterse, Silvia Piranomonte, Luigi Piro, Giovanna Pugliese, Maria E Ravasio, Ben Rayson, Ruben Salvaterra, Rubén Sánchez-Ramírez, Nikhil Sarin, Samuel PR Shilling, Rhaana LC Starling, Gianpiero Tagliaferri, Aishwarya Linesh Thakur, Christina C Thöne, Klaas Wiersema, Isabelle Worssam, Tayyaba Zafar

Extragalactic Magnetism with SOFIA (SALSA Legacy Program). VII. A Tomographic View of Far-infrared and Radio Polarimetric Observations through MHD Simulations of Galaxies

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 966:1 (2024) 43

Authors:

Sergio Martin-Alvarez, Enrique Lopez-Rodriguez, Tara Dacunha, Susan E Clark, Alejandro S Borlaff, Rainer Beck, Francisco Rodríguez Montero, Seoyoung L Jung, Julien Devriendt, Adrianne Slyz, Julia Christine Roman-Duval, Evangelia Ntormousi, Mehrnoosh Tahani, Kandaswamy Subramanian, Daniel A Dale, Pamela M Marcum, Konstantinos Tassis, Ignacio del Moral-Castro, Le Ngoc Tram, Matt J Jarvis

Abstract:

The structure of magnetic fields in galaxies remains poorly constrained, despite the importance of magnetism in the evolution of galaxies. Radio synchrotron and far-infrared (FIR) polarization and polarimetric observations are the best methods to measure galactic scale properties of magnetic fields in galaxies beyond the Milky Way. We use synthetic polarimetric observations of a simulated galaxy to identify and quantify the regions, scales, and interstellar medium (ISM) phases probed at FIR and radio wavelengths. Our studied suite of magnetohydrodynamical cosmological zoom-in simulations features high-resolutions (10 pc full-cell size) and multiple magnetization models. Our synthetic observations have a striking resemblance to those of observed galaxies. We find that the total and polarized radio emission extends to approximately double the altitude above the galactic disk (half-intensity disk thickness of h I radio ∼ h PI radio = 0.23 ± 0.03 kpc) relative to the total FIR and polarized emission that are concentrated in the disk midplane (h I FIR ∼ h PI FIR = 0.11 ± 0.01 kpc). Radio emission traces magnetic fields at scales of ≳300 pc, whereas FIR emission probes magnetic fields at the smallest scales of our simulations. These scales are comparable to our spatial resolution and well below the spatial resolution (<300 pc) of existing FIR polarimetric measurements. Finally, we confirm that synchrotron emission traces a combination of the warm neutral and cold neutral gas phases, whereas FIR emission follows the densest gas in the cold neutral phase in the simulation. These results are independent of the ISM magnetic field strength. The complementarity we measure between radio and FIR wavelengths motivates future multiwavelength polarimetric observations to advance our knowledge of extragalactic magnetism.