The Nuclear Bulge extinction

(2008)

Authors:

Andrew J Gosling, Katherine M Blundell, Reba M Bandyopadhyay, Phil Lucas

A transient radio jet in an erupting dwarf nova.

Science 320:5881 (2008) 1318-1320

Authors:

Elmar Körding, Michael Rupen, Christian Knigge, Rob Fender, Vivek Dhawan, Matthew Templeton, Tom Muxlow

Abstract:

Astrophysical jets seem to occur in nearly all types of accreting objects, from supermassive black holes to young stellar objects. On the basis of x-ray binaries, a unified scenario describing the disc/jet coupling has evolved and been extended to many accreting objects. The only major exceptions are thought to be cataclysmic variables: Dwarf novae, weakly accreting white dwarfs, show similar outburst behavior to x-ray binaries, but no jet has yet been detected. Here we present radio observations of a dwarf nova in outburst showing variable flat-spectrum radio emission that is best explained as synchrotron emission originating in a transient jet. Both the inferred jet power and the relation to the outburst cycle are analogous to those seen in x-ray binaries, suggesting that the disc/jet coupling mechanism is ubiquitous.

A transient radio jet in an erupting dwarf nova

(2008)

Authors:

Elmar Koerding, Michael Rupen, Christian Knigge, Rob Fender, Vivek Dhawan, Matthew Templeton, Tom Muxlow

Periastron Precession Measurements in Transiting Extrasolar Planetary Systems at the Level of General Relativity

(2008)

Authors:

András Pál, Bence Kocsis

Radio-loud and radio-quiet quasars: one population, different epochs of observation

ASP Conference Series (2008)

Abstract:

I bring together evidence for the rapidity with which quasars' radio synchrotron lobe emission fades and for the intermittency with which jet plasma is ejected from individual quasars and radio galaxies and affirm the picture presented by Nipoti et al (2005) that the radio-loudness of quasars is a function of the epoch at which they are observed. I briefly illustrate this account with examples of successive episodes of jet activity where the axis along which jet plasma is launched appears to have precessed. A new model for the weak core radio emission from radio-quiet quasars, that is not any kind of jet ejecta, is also briefly described.