SMC X-3: the closest ultraluminous X-ray source powered by a neutron star with non-dipole magnetic field

Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 605 (2017) a39

Authors:

SS Tsygankov, V Doroshenko, AA Lutovinov, AA Mushtukov, J Poutanen

The Noisy Ageing of Slow Pulsars: New Thoughts on the Evolution of the Pulsar Population

Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union Cambridge University Press (CUP) 13:S337 (2017) 100-103

Authors:

Aris Karastergiou, Simon Johnston

Towards rapid transient identification and characterization of kilonovae

(2017)

Authors:

Michael Coughlin, Tim Dietrich, Kyohei Kawaguchi, Stephen Smartt, Christopher Stubbs, Maximiliano Ujevic

Deep 230-470 MHz VLA Observations of the mini-halo in the Perseus Cluster

MNRAS 469 (2017) 2017-2017

Authors:

M Gendron-Marsolais, J Hlavacek-Larrondo, RJ van Weeren, T Clarke, AC Fabian, HT Intema, GB Taylor, KM Blundell, JS Sanders

Abstract:

We present a low-frequency view of the Perseus cluster with new observations from the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (JVLA) at 230-470 MHz. The data reveal a multitude of new structures associated with the mini-halo. The mini-halo seems to be influenced both by the AGN activity as well as by the sloshing motion of the cool core cluster's gas. In addition, it has a filamentary structure similar to that seen in radio relics found in merging clusters. We present a detailed description of the data reduction and imaging process of the dataset. The depth and resolution of the observations allow us to conduct for the first time a detailed comparison of the mini-halo structure with the X-ray structure as seen in the Chandra X-ray images. The resulting image shows very clearly that the mini-halo emission is mostly contained behind the cold fronts, similar to that predicted by simulations of gas sloshing in galaxy clusters. However, due to the proximity of the Perseus cluster, as well as the quality of the data at low radio frequencies and at X-ray wavelengths, we also find evidence of fine structure. This structure includes several radial radio filaments extending in different directions, a concave radio structure associated with the southern X-ray bay and sharp edges that correlate with X-ray edges. Mini-halos are therefore not simply diffuse, uniform radio sources, but are rather filled with a rich variety of complex structures. These results illustrate the high-quality images that can be obtained with the new JVLA at low radio-frequencies, as well as the necessity to obtain deeper, higher-fidelity radio images of mini-halos and halos in clusters to further understand their origin.

A Tale of Two Transients: GW 170104 and GRB 170105A

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 845:2 (2017) 152

Authors:

V Bhalerao, MM Kasliwal, D Bhattacharya, A Corsi, E Aarthy, SM Adams, N Blagorodnova, T Cantwell, SB Cenko, R Fender, D Frail, R Itoh, J Jencson, N Kawai, AKH Kong, T Kupfer, A Kutyrev, J Mao, S Mate, NPS Mithun, K Mooley, DA Perley, YC Perrott, RM Quimby, AR Rao, LP Singer, V Sharma, DJ Titterington, E Troja, SV Vadawale, A Vibhute, H Vedantham, S Veilleux