The VLT-FLAMES Tarantula Survey I: Introduction and observational overview

(2011)

Authors:

CJ Evans, WD Taylor, V Henault-Brunet, H Sana, A de Koter, S Simon-Diaz, G Carraro, T Bagnoli, N Bastian, JM Bestenlehner, AZ Bonanos, E Bressert, I Brott, MA Campbell, M Cantiello, JS Clark, E Costa, PA Crowther, SE de Mink, E Doran, PL Dufton, PR Dunstall, K Friedrich, M Garcia, M Gieles, G Graefener, A Herrero, ID Howarth, RG Izzard, N Langer, DJ Lennon, J Maiz Apellaniz, N Markova, F Najarro, J Puls, OH Ramirez, C Sabin-Sanjulian, SJ Smartt, VE Stroud, J Th van Loon, JS Vink, NR Walborn

Imprint of Accretion Disk-Induced Migration on Gravitational Waves from Extreme Mass Ratio Inspirals

(2011)

Authors:

Nicolás Yunes, Bence Kocsis, Abraham Loeb, Zoltán Haiman

Resonant relaxation and the warp of the stellar disc in the Galactic Centre

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 412:1 (2011) 187-207

Authors:

Bence Kocsis, Scott Tremaine

A transient component in the pulse profile of PSR J0738-4042

ArXiv 1103.2247 (2011)

Authors:

Aris Karastergiou, Steve J Roberts, Simon Johnston, Hyoung-joo Lee, Patrick Weltevrede, Michael Kramer

Abstract:

One of the tenets of the radio pulsar observational picture is that the integrated pulse profiles are constant with time. This assumption underpins much of the fantastic science made possible via pulsar timing. Over the past few years, however, this assumption has come under question with a number of pulsars showing pulse shape changes on a range of timescales. Here, we show the dramatic appearance of a bright component in the pulse profile of PSR J0738-4042 (B0736-40). The component arises on the leading edge of the profile. It was not present in 2004 but strongly present in 2006 and all observations thereafter. A subsequent search through the literature shows the additional component varies in flux density over timescales of decades. We show that the polarization properties of the transient component are consistent with the picture of competing orthogonal polarization modes. Faced with the general problem of identifying and characterising average profile changes, we outline and apply a statistical technique based on a Hidden Markov Model. The value of this technique is established through simulations, and is shown to work successfully in the case of low signal-to-noise profiles.

e-VLBI observations of Circinus X-1: monitoring of the quiescent and flaring radio emission on AU scales

(2011)

Authors:

A Moin, C Reynolds, JCA Miller-Jones, SJ TIngay, CJ Phillips, AK Tzioumis, GD Nicolson, RP Fender