The first resolved imaging of milliarcsecond-scale jets in Circinus X-1
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters 419:1 (2012)
Abstract:
We present the first resolved imaging of the milliarcsecond-scale jets in the neutron star X-ray binary Circinus X-1, made using the Australian Long Baseline Array. The angular extent of the resolved jets is ∼20mas, corresponding to a physical scale of ∼150au at the assumed distance of 7.8kpc. The jet position angle is relatively consistent with previous arcsecond-scale imaging with the Australia Telescope Compact Array. The radio emission is symmetric about the peak, and is unresolved along the minor axis, constraining the opening angle to be <20°. We observe evidence for outward motion of the components between the two halves of the observation. Constraints on the proper motion of the radio-emitting components suggest that they are only mildly relativistic, although we cannot definitively rule out the presence of the unseen, ultrarelativistic (Γ > 15) flow previously inferred to exist in this system. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.The pan-starrs-1 and the recent SN science
Memorie della Societa Astronomica Italiana - Journal of the Italian Astronomical Society 19 (2012) 166-172
Abstract:
The search for transient phenomena in the Universe has entered a new era. In the next decade new all-sky surveys will provide a vast amount of astronomical survey data. These data will address issues in many of the astronomical fields. In the Supernova field, we will have for the first time the possibility to discover SNe without most of the observational bias present in the previous SN searches. Here we report the status of the transients study in one of the new on-going all-sky surveys: the Panoramic Survey Telescope & Rapid Response System-1 (PanStarrs-1).Tidal dwarf galaxies in the nearby Universe
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 419:1 (2012) 70-79
Abstract:
We present a statistical observational study of the tidal dwarf (TD) population in the nearby Universe by exploiting a large, homogeneous catalogue of galaxy mergers compiled from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey. 95percent of TD-producing mergers involve two spiral progenitors (typically both in the blue cloud), while most remaining systems have at least one spiral progenitor. The fraction of TD-producing mergers where both parents are early-type galaxies is less than 2percent, suggesting that TDs are unlikely to form in such mergers. The bulk of TD-producing mergers inhabit a field environment and have mass ratios greater than ~1:7 (the median value is 1:2.5). TDs forming at the tidal-tail tips are ~4 times more massive than those forming at the base of the tails. TD stellar masses are less than 10percent of the stellar masses of their parents (the median is 0.6percent) and lie within 15 optical half-light radii of their parent galaxies. The TD population is typically bluer than the parents, with a median offset of ~0.3mag in the (g-r) colour and the TD colours are not affected by the presence of active galactic nuclei (AGN) activity in their parents. An analysis of their star formation histories indicates that TDs contain both newly formed stars (with a median age of ~30Myr) and old stars drawn from the parent discs, each component probably contributing roughly equally to the stellar mass of the object. Thus TDs are not formed purely through gas condensation in tidal tails but host a significant component of old stars from the parent discs. Finally, an analysis of the TD contribution to the observed dwarf-to-massive galaxy ratio in the local Universe indicates that ~6percent of dwarfs in nearby clusters may have a tidal origin, if TD production rates in nearby mergers are representative of those in the high-redshift Universe. Even if TD production rates at high redshift were several factors higher, it seems unlikely that the entire dwarf galaxy population today is a result of merger activity over the lifetime of the Universe. © 2011 The Authors Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society © 2011 RAS.A comparison between star formation rate diagnostics and rate of core collapse supernovae within 11 Mpc
Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 537 (2012) a132
The VLT-FLAMES survey of massive stars: NGC 346-013 as a test case for massive close binary evolution⋆
Astronomy & Astrophysics EDP Sciences 537 (2012) a29