A tool to separate optical/infrared disc and jet emission in X-ray transient outbursts: the colour-magnitude diagrams of XTE J1550-564

(2011)

Authors:

DM Russell, D Maitra, RJH Dunn, RP Fender

Testing the jet quenching paradigm with an ultradeep observation of a steadily soft state black hole

(2011)

Authors:

DM Russell, JCA Miller-Jones, TJ Maccarone, YJ Yang, RP Fender, F Lewis

Blazars in the Fermi era: The ovro 40 m telescope monitoring program

Astrophysical Journal, Supplement Series 194:2 (2011)

Authors:

JL Richards, W Max-Moerbeck, V Pavlidou, OG King, TJ Pearson, ACS Readhead, R Reeves, MC Shepherd, MA Stevenson, LC Weintraub, L Fuhrmann, E Angelakis, J Anton Zensus, SE Healey, RW Romani, MS Shaw, K Grainge, M Birkinshaw, K Lancaster, DM Worrall, GB Taylor, G Cotter, R Bustos

Abstract:

The Large Area Telescope (LAT) aboard the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope provides an unprecedented opportunity to study gamma-ray blazars. To capitalize on this opportunity, beginning in late 2007, about a year before the start of LAT science operations, we began a large-scale, fast-cadence 15GHz radio monitoring program with the 40 m telescope at the Owens Valley Radio Observatory. This program began with the 1158 northern (δ > -20°) sources from the Candidate Gamma-ray Blazar Survey and now encompasses over 1500 sources, each observed twice per week with about 4mJy (minimum) and 3% (typical) uncertainty. Here, we describe this monitoring program and our methods, and present radio light curves from the first two years (2008 and 2009). As a first application, we combine these data with a novel measure of light curve variability amplitude, the intrinsic modulation index, through a likelihood analysis to examine the variability properties of subpopulations of our sample. We demonstrate that, with high significance (6σ), gamma-ray-loud blazars detected by the LAT during its first 11 months of operation vary with almost a factor of two greater amplitude than do the gamma-ray-quiet blazars in our sample. We also find a significant (3σ) difference between variability amplitude in BL Lacertae objects and flat-spectrum radio quasars (FSRQs), with the former exhibiting larger variability amplitudes. Finally, low-redshift (z < 1) FSRQs are found to vary more strongly than high-redshift FSRQs, with 3σ significance. These findings represent an important step toward understanding why some blazars emit gamma-rays while others, with apparently similar properties, remain silent. © 2011. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved..

NO CONFIRMED NEW ISOLATED NEUTRON STARS IN THE SDSS DATA RELEASE 4**Based on observations obtained at the Gemini Observatory, which is operated by the Association of Universities for Research in Astronomy (AURA) under a cooperative agreement with the National Science Foundation on behalf of the Gemini partnership: the National Science Foundation (United States), the Science and Technology Facilities Council (United Kingdom), the National Research Council (Canada), CONICYT (Chile), the Australian Research Council (Australia), CNPq (Brazil), and CONICET (Argentina). Also includes observations obtained with the Apache Point Observatory 3.5 m telescope, which is owned and operated by the Astrophysical Research Consortium.

The Astronomical Journal American Astronomical Society 141:6 (2011) 176

Authors:

Marcel A Agüeros, Bettina Posselt, Scott F Anderson, Philip Rosenfield, Frank Haberl, Lee Homer, Bruce Margon, Emily R Newsom, Wolfgang Voges

Observation of H2O in a strongly lensed Herschel -ATLAS source at z = 2.3

Astronomy and Astrophysics 530 (2011)

Authors:

A Omont, R Neri, P Cox, R Lupu, M Guélin, P Van Der Werf, A Weiß, R Ivison, M Negrello, L Leeuw, M Lehnert, I Smail, A Verma, AJ Baker, A Beelen, JE Aguirre, M Baes, F Bertoldi, DL Clements, A Cooray, K Coppin, H Dannerbauer, G De Zotti, S Dye, N Fiolet, D Frayer, R Gavazzi, D Hughes, M Jarvis, M Krips, MJ Michałowski, EJ Murphy, D Riechers, S Serjeant, AM Swinbank, P Temi, M Vaccari, JD Vieira, R Auld, B Buttiglione, A Cava, A Dariush, L Dunne, SA Eales, J Fritz, H Gomez, E Ibar, S Maddox, E Pascale, M Pohlen, E Rigby, DJB Smith, J Bock, CM Bradford, J Glenn, KS Scott, J Zmuidzinas

Abstract:

The Herschel survey, H-ATLAS, with its large areal coverage, has recently discovered a number of bright, strongly lensed high-z submillimeter galaxies. The strong magnification makes it possible to study molecular species other than CO, which are otherwise difficult to observe in high-z galaxies. Among the lensed galaxies already identified by H-ATLAS, the source J090302.9-014127B (SDP.17b) at z = 2.305 is remarkable because of its excitation conditions and a tentative detection of the H2O 202-111 emission line (Lupu et al. 2010, ApJ, submitted). We report observations of this line in SDP.17b using the IRAM interferometer equipped with its new 277-371 GHz receivers. The H2O line is detected at a redshift of z = 2.3049 ± 0.0006, with a flux of 7.8 ± 0.5 Jy km s-1 and a FWHM of 250 ± 60 km s-1. The new flux is 2.4 times weaker than the previous tentative detection, although both remain marginally consistent within 1.6σ. The intrinsic line luminosity and ratio of H2O(2 02 - 111)/CO(8 - 7) are comparable with those of the nearby starburst/enshrouded-AGN Mrk 231, and the ratio I(H2O)/L FIR is even higher, suggesting that SDP.17b could also host a luminous AGN. The detection of a strong H2O 202 - 1 11 line in SDP.17b implies an efficient excitation mechanism of the water levels that must occur in very dense and warm interstellar gas probably similar to Mrk 231. © 2011 ESO.