Geodetic precession in PSR B1913+16

RADIO PULSARS, PROCEEDINGS 302 (2003) 99-102

Authors:

M Kramer, O Löhmer, A Karastergiou

Probing the absorbing haloes around two high-redshift radio galaxies with VLT-UVES

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 338:1 (2003) 263-272

Authors:

MJ Jarvis, RJ Wilman, HJA Röttgering, L Binette

Simultaneous, single pulse observations of radio pulsars: Observing single pulses at a broad frequency range

RADIO PULSARS, PROCEEDINGS 302 (2003) 195-198

Authors:

A Karastergiou, M Kramer, AG Lyne, S Johnston, R Bhat, Y Gupta

The clustering of sub-mJy radio sources in the Bootes Deep Field

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 339:3 (2003) 695-700

Authors:

RJ Wilman, HJA Röttgering, RA Overzier, MJ Jarvis

The mass of radio galaxies from low to high redshift

ESO ASTROPHY SYMP (2003) 148-153

Authors:

MJ Jarvis, S Rawlings, S Eales, KM Blundell, CJ Willott

Abstract:

Using a new radio sample, 6C* designed to find radio galaxies at z > 4 along with the complete 3CRR and 6CE sample we extend the radio galaxy K - z relation to z similar to 4.5. The 6C* K - z data significantly improve delineation of the K - z relation for radio galaxies at high redshift (z > 2). In a spatially flat universe with a cosmological constant (Omega(M) = 0.3 and Omega(A) = 0.7), the most luminous radio sources appear to be associated with galaxies with a luminosity distribution with a high mean (approximate to 5L*), and a low dispersion (sigma similar to 0.5 mag) which formed their stars at epochs corresponding to z greater than or similar to 2.5).