An off-axis relativistic jet seen in the long lasting delayed radio flare of the TDE AT 2018hyz
(2023)
A 5.3-min-period pulsing white dwarf in a binary detected from radio to X-rays
Nature Astronomy Springer Nature 7:8 (2023) 931-942
AT 2021loi: A Bowen Fluorescence Flare with a Rebrightening Episode Occurring in a Previously Known AGN
The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 953:1 (2023) 32
Diffuse sources, clustering, and the excess anisotropy of the radio synchrotron background
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 523:4 (2023) 5034-5046
Abstract:
We present the largest low frequency (120 MHz) arcminute resolution image of the radio synchrotron background (RSB) to date, and its corresponding angular power spectrum of anisotropies (APS) with angular scales ranging from 3◦ to 0.3 arcmin. We show that the RSB around the north celestial pole has a significant excess anisotropy power at all scales over a model of unclustered point sources based on source counts of known source classes. This anisotropy excess, which does not seem attributable to the diffuse Galactic emission, could be linked to the surface brightness excess of the RSB. To better understand the information contained within the measured APS, we model the RSB varying the brightness distribution, size, and angular clustering of potential sources. We show that the observed APS could be produced by a population of faint clustered point sources only if the clustering is extreme and the size of the Gaussian clusters is ≲1 arcmin. We also show that the observed APS could be produced by a population of faint diffuse sources with sizes ≲1 arcmin, and this is supported by features present in our image. Both of these cases would also cause an associated surface brightness excess. These classes of sources are in a parameter space not well probed by even the deepest radio surveys to date.First Detection of X-Ray Polarization from the Accreting Neutron Star 4U 1820−303
The Astrophysical Journal Letters American Astronomical Society 953:2 (2023) l22