The VLA Frontier Fields Survey: Deep, High-resolution Radio Imaging of the MACS Lensing Clusters at 3 and 6 GHz

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 910:2 (2021) 105

Authors:

I Heywood, EJ Murphy, EF Jiménez-Andrade, L Armus, WD Cotton, C DeCoursey, M Dickinson, TJW Lazio, E Momjian, K Penner, I Smail, OM Smirnov

Structured variational inference for simulating populations of radio galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 503:3 (2021) 3351-3370

Authors:

David J Bastien, Anna MM Scaife, Hongming Tang, Micah Bowles, Fiona Porter

A polarization census of bright pulsars using the ultrawideband receiver on the Parkes radio telescope

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 504:1 (2021) 228-247

Authors:

C Sobey, S Johnston, S Dai, M Kerr, Rn Manchester, Ls Oswald, A Parthasarathy, Rm Shannon, P Weltevrede

Abstract:

We present high signal-to-noise ratio, full polarization pulse profiles for 40 bright, 'slowly' rotating (non-recycled) pulsars using the new ultrawideband low-frequency (UWL; 704-4032 MHz) receiver on the Parkes radio telescope. We obtain updated and accurate interstellar medium parameters towards these pulsars (dispersion measures and Faraday rotation measures), and reveal Faraday dispersion towards PSR J1721-3532 caused by interstellar scattering. We find general trends in the pulse profiles including decreasing fractional linear polarization and increasing degree of circular polarization with increasing frequency, consistent with previous studies, while also revealing new features and frequency evolution. This demonstrates results that can be obtained using UWL monitoring observations of slow pulsars, which are valuable for improving our understanding of pulsar emission and the intervening interstellar medium. The calibrated data products are publicly available.

The VANDELS ESO public spectroscopic survey: final data release of 2087 spectra and spectroscopic measurements

Astronomy and Astrophysics EDP Sciences 647 (2021) A150

Authors:

B Garilli, R McLure, L Pentericci, P Franzetti, A Gargiulo, A Carnall, O Cucciati, A Iovino, R Amorin, M Bolzonella, A Bongiorno, M Castellano, A Cimatti, M Cirasuolo, F Cullen, J Dunlop, D Elbaz, S Finkelstein, A Fontana, F Fontanot, M Fumana, L Guaita, W Hartley, M Jarvis, S Juneau, D Maccagni, D McLeod, K Nandra, E Pompei, L Pozzetti, M Scodeggio, M Talia, A Calabro, G Cresci, Jpu Fynbo, Np Hathi, P Hibon, Am Koekemoer, M Magliocchetti, M Salvato, G Vietri, G Zamorani, O Almaini, I Balestra, S Bardelli, R Begley, G Brammer, Ef Bell, Raa Bowler, M Brusa

Abstract:

VANDELS is an ESO Public Spectroscopic Survey designed to build a sample of high-signal-to-noise ratio, medium-resolution spectra of galaxies at redshifts between 1 and 6.5. Here we present the final Public Data Release of the VANDELS Survey, comprising 2087 redshift measurements. We provide a detailed description of sample selection, observations, and data reduction procedures. The final catalogue reaches a target selection completeness of 40% at iAB = 25. The high signal-to-noise ratio of the spectra (above 7 in 80% of the spectra) and the dispersion of 2.5 Å allowed us to measure redshifts with high precision, the redshift measurement success rate reaching almost 100%. Together with the redshift catalogue and the reduced spectra, we also provide optical mid-infrared photometry and physical parameters derived through fitting the spectral energy distribution. The observed galaxy sample comprises both passive and star forming galaxies covering a stellar mass range of 8.3 < Log(M∗/M⊙) < 11.7.

The black hole transient MAXI J1348-630: evolution of the compact and transient jets during its 2019/2020 outburst

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 504:1 (2021) 444-468

Authors:

F Carotenuto, S Corbel, E Tremou, Td Russell, A Tzioumis, Robert Fender, Pa Woudt, Sara Motta, Jca Miller-Jones, J Chauhan, Aj Tetarenko, Gr Sivakoff, Ian Heywood, A Horesh, Aj van der Horst, E Koerding, Kunal Mooley

Abstract:

We present the radio and X-ray monitoring campaign of the 2019/2020 outburst of MAXI J1348-630, a new black hole X-ray binary (BH XRB) discovered in 2019 January. We observed MAXI J1348-630 for ∼14 months in the radio band with MeerKAT and the Australia Telescope Compact Array, and in the X-rays with MAXI and Swift/XRT. Throughout the outburst, we detected and tracked the evolution of compact and transient jets. Following the main outburst, the system underwent at least four hard-state-only re-flares, during which compact jets were again detected. For the major outburst, we observed the rise, quenching and reactivation of compact jets, as well as two single-sided discrete ejecta travelling away from the BH, launched ∼2 months apart. These ejecta displayed the highest proper motion (≳100 mas d-1) ever measured for an accreting BH binary. From the jet motion, we constrain the ejecta inclination and speed to be ≤46° and ≥0.69 c, and the opening angle and transverse expansion speed of the first component to be ≤6° and ≤0.05 c. We also infer that the first ejection happened at the hard-to-soft state transition, before a strong radio flare, while the second ejection was launched during a short excursion from the soft to the intermediate state. After travelling with constant speed, the first component underwent a strong deceleration, which was covered with unprecedented detail and suggested that MAXI J1348-630 could be located inside a low-density cavity in the interstellar medium, as already proposed for XTE J1550-564 and H1743-322.