The 1.28 GHz MeerKAT DEEP2 Image
The Astrophysical Journal: an international review of astronomy and astronomical physics American Astronomical Society (2020)
Abstract:
We present the confusion-limited 1.28 GHz MeerKAT DEEP2 image covering one $\approx 68'$ FWHM primary beam area with $7.6''$ FWHM resolution and $0.55 \pm 0.01$ $\mu$Jy/beam rms noise. Its J2000 center position $\alpha=04^h 13^m 26.4^s$, $\delta=-80^\circ 00' 00''$ was selected to minimize artifacts caused by bright sources. We introduce the new 64-element MeerKAT array and describe commissioning observations to measure the primary beam attenuation pattern, estimate telescope pointing errors, and pinpoint $(u,v)$ coordinate errors caused by offsets in frequency or time. We constructed a 1.4 GHz differential source count by combining a power-law count fit to the DEEP2 confusion $P(D)$ distribution from $0.25$ to $10$ $\mu$Jy with counts of individual DEEP2 sources between $10$ $\mu$Jy and $2.5$ mJy. Most sources fainter than $S \sim 100$ $\mu$Jy are distant star-forming galaxies obeying the FIR/radio correlation, and sources stronger than $0.25$ $\mu$Jy account for $\sim93\%$ of the radio background produced by star-forming galaxies. For the first time, the DEEP2 source count has reached the depth needed to reveal the majority of the star formation history of the universe. A pure luminosity evolution of the 1.4 GHz local luminosity function consistent with the Madau & Dickinson (2014) model for the evolution of star-forming galaxies based on UV and infrared data underpredicts our 1.4 GHz source count in the range $-5 \lesssim \log[S(\mathrm{Jy})] \lesssim -4$.FPGA architecture to search for accelerated pulsars with SKA
Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 00 (2020) 1-5
MKT J170456.2-482100: the first transient discovered by MeerKAT
MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY 491:1 (2020) 560-575
Abstract:
© 2019 The Author(s) We report the discovery of the first transient with MeerKAT, MKT J170456.2−482100, discovered in ThunderKAT images of the low-mass X-ray binary GX339−4. MKT J170456.2−482100 is variable in the radio, reaching a maximum flux density of 0.71 ± 0.11 mJy on 2019 October 12, and is undetected in 15 out of 48 ThunderKAT epochs. MKT J170456.2−482100 is coincident with the chromospherically active K-type sub-giant TYC 8332-2529-1, and ∼ 18 yr of archival optical photometry of the star shows that it varies with a period of 21.25 ± 0.04 d. The shape and phase of the optical light curve changes over time, and we detect both X-ray and UV emission at the position of MKT J170456.2−482100, which may indicate that TYC 8332-2529-1 has large star spots. Spectroscopic analysis shows that TYC 8332-2529-1 is in a binary, and has a line-of-sight radial velocity amplitude of 43 km s−1. We also observe a spectral feature in antiphase with the K-type sub-giant, with a line-of-sight radial velocity amplitude of ∼ 12 ± 10 km s−1, whose origins cannot currently be explained. Further observations and investigation are required to determine the nature of the MKT J170456.2−482100 system.Probing the non-thermal emission in the Perseus cluster with the JVLA
Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union (2020) 44-52
Abstract:
© International Astronomical Union 2020. We present deep low radio frequency (230-470 MHz) observations from the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array of the Perseus cluster, probing the non-thermal emission from the old particle population of the AGN outflows. Our observations of this nearby relaxed cool core cluster have revealed a multitude of new structures associated with the mini-halo, extending to hundreds of kpc in size. Its irregular morphology seems to have been influenced both by the AGN activity and by the sloshing motion of the cluster' gas. In addition, it has a filamentary structure similar to that seen in radio relics found in merging clusters. These results illustrate the high-quality images that can be obtained with the new JVLA at low radio-frequencies.The MeerKAT telescope as a pulsar facility: System verification and early science results from MeerTime
Publications of the Astronomical Society of Australia Cambridge University Press 37 (2020) e028