The ubiquity of variable radio emission and spin-down rates in pulsars

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) (2025) staf427

Authors:

ME Lower, A Karastergiou, S Johnston, PR Brook, S Dai, M Kerr, RN Manchester, LS Oswald, RM Shannon, C Sobey, P Weltevrede

Anomaly Detection and Radio-frequency Interference Classification with Unsupervised Learning in Narrowband Radio Technosignature Searches

Astronomical Journal American Astronomical Society 169:4 (2025) 206

Authors:

Ben Jacobson-Bell, Steve Croft, Carmen Choza, Alex Andersson, Daniel Bautista, Vishal Gajjar, Matthew Lebofsky, David HE MacMahon, Caleb Painter, Andrew PV Siemion

Abstract:

The search for radio technosignatures is an anomaly detection problem: Candidate signals represent needles of interest in the proverbial haystack of radio-frequency interference (RFI). Current search frameworks find an enormity of false-positive signals, especially in large surveys, requiring manual follow-up to a sometimes prohibitive degree. Unsupervised learning provides an algorithmic way to winnow the most anomalous signals from the chaff, as well as group together RFI signals that bear morphological similarities. We present Grouping Low-frequency Observations By Unsupervised Learning After Reduction (GLOBULAR) clustering, a signal processing method that uses hierarchical density-based spatial clustering of applications with noise (or HDBSCAN) to reduce the false-positive rate and isolate outlier signals for further analysis. When combined with a standard narrowband signal detection and spatial filtering pipeline, such as turboSETI, GLOBULAR clustering offers significant improvements in the false-positive rate over the standard pipeline alone, suggesting dramatic potential for the amelioration of manual follow-up requirements for future large surveys. By removing RFI signals in regions of high spectral occupancy, GLOBULAR clustering may also enable the detection of signals missed by the standard pipeline. We benchmark our method against the C. Choza et al. turboSETI-only search of 97 nearby galaxies at the L band, demonstrating a false-positive hit reduction rate of 93.1% and a false-positive event reduction rate of 99.3%.

Blast waves and reverse shocks: from ultra-relativistic GRBs to moderately relativistic X-ray binaries

(2025)

Authors:

James H Matthews, Alex J Cooper, Lauren Rhodes, Katherine Savard, Rob Fender, Francesco Carotenuto, Fraser J Cowie, Emma L Elley, Joe Bright, Andrew K Hughes, Sara E Motta

Joint Radiative and Kinematic Modelling of X-ray Binary Ejecta: Energy Estimate and Reverse Shock Detection

(2025)

Authors:

AJ Cooper, JH Matthews, F Carotenuto, R Fender, GP Lamb, TD Russell, N Sarin, K Savard

Sporadic radio pulses from a white dwarf binary at the orbital period

Nature Astronomy Nature Research 9:5 (2025) 672-684

Authors:

I de Ruiter, KM Rajwade, CG Bassa, A Rowlinson, RAMJ Wijers, CD Kilpatrick, G Stefansson, JR Callingham, JWT Hessels, TE Clarke, W Peters, RAD Wijnands, TW Shimwell, S ter Veen, V Morello, GR Zeimann, S Mahadevan

Abstract:

Recent observations have revealed rare, previously unknown flashes of cosmic radio waves lasting from milliseconds to minutes, with a periodicity of minutes to an hour. These transient radio signals must originate from sources in the Milky Way and from coherent emission processes in astrophysical plasma. They are theorized to be produced in the extreme and highly magnetized environments around white dwarfs or neutron stars. However, the astrophysical origin of these signals remains contested, and multiple progenitor models may be needed to explain their diverse properties. Here we present the discovery of a transient radio source, ILT J1101 + 5521, whose roughly minute-long pulses arrive with a periodicity of 125.5 min. We find that ILT J1101 + 5521 is an M dwarf–white dwarf binary system with an orbital period that matches the period of the radio pulses, which are observed when the two stars are in conjunction. The binary nature of ILT J1101 + 5521 establishes that some long-period radio transients originate from orbital motion modulating the observed emission, as opposed to an isolated rotating star. We conclude that ILT J1101 + 5521 is probably a polar system where magnetic interaction has synchronized the rotational and orbital periods of the white dwarf. Magnetic interaction and plasma exchange between two stars has been theorized to generate sporadic radio emission, making ILT J1101 + 5521 a potential low-mass analogue to such mechanisms.