29 research outputs found

    The impact of radio-emitting supermassive black holes on their environment

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    Discovery of a radio relic in the low mass, merging galaxy cluster PLCK G200.9-28.2

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    Radio relics at the peripheries of galaxy clusters are tracers of the elusive cluster merger shocks. We report the discovery of a single radio relic in the galaxy cluster PLCK G200.9-28.2 (z=0.22z=0.22, M500=2.7±0.2×1014M⊙M_{500} = 2.7\pm0.2 \times 10^{14} M_{\odot}) using the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope at 235 and 610 MHz and the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array at 1500 MHz. The relic has a size of ∼1×0.28\sim 1 \times 0.28 Mpc, an arc-like morphology and is located at 0.9 Mpc from the X-ray brightness peak in the cluster. The integrated spectral index of the relic is 1.21±0.151.21\pm0.15. The spectral index map between 235 and 610 MHz shows steepening from the outer to the inner edge of the relic in line with the expectation from a cluster merger shock. Under the assumption of diffusive shock acceleration, the radio spectral index implies a Mach number of 3.3±1.83.3\pm1.8 for the shock. The analysis of archival XMM Newton data shows that PLCK G200.9-28.2 consists of a northern brighter sub-cluster, and a southern sub-cluster in a state of merger. This cluster has the lowest mass among the clusters hosting single radio relics. The position of the Planck Sunyaev Ze'ldovich effect in this cluster is offset by 700 kpc from the X-ray peak in the direction of the radio relic, suggests a physical origin for the offset. Such large offsets in low mass clusters can be a useful tool to select disturbed clusters and to study the state of merger.Comment: 10 pages, 7 figures, 4 tables. Accepted for publication in MNRA

    Matching LOFAR sources across radio bands

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    Aims. With the recent preliminary release of the LOFAR LBA Sky Survey (LoLSS), the first wide-area, ultra-low frequency observations from LOFAR were published. Our aim is to combine this data set with other surveys at higher frequencies to study the spectral properties of a large sample of radio sources. Methods. We present a new cross-matching algorithm taking into account the sizes of the radio sources and apply it to the LoLSS-PR, LoTSS-DR1, LoTSS-DR2 (all LOFAR), TGSS-ADR1 (GMRT), WENSS (WSRT) and NVSS (VLA) catalogues. We then study the number of matched counterparts for LoLSS radio sources and their spectral properties. Results. We find counterparts for 22 607 (89.5%) LoLSS sources. The remaining 2 640 sources (10.5%) are identified either as an artefact in the LoLSS survey (3.6%) or flagged due to their closeness to bright sources (6.9%). We find an average spectral index of α=−0.77±0.18\alpha = -0.77 \pm 0.18 between LoLSS and NVSS. Between LoLSS and LoTSS-DR2 we find α=−0.71±0.31\alpha = -0.71 \pm 0.31. The average spectral index is flux density independent above S54=181S_{54} = 181 mJy. Comparison of the spectral slopes from LoLSS--LoTSS-DR2 with LoTSS-DR2--NVSS indicates that the probed population of radio sources exhibits evidence for a negative spectral curvature.Comment: 13 pages, 22 figures and 2 tables. Accepted for publication in A&

    Low-frequency radio absorption in Tycho's supernova remnant

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    © 2019. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved.Tycho's SNR is the remnant of the type Ia supernova explosion SN1572. In this work we present new low-frequency radio observations with the LOFAR Low-Band and High-Band Antennae, centred at 58 MHz and 143 MHz, and with an angular resolution of 41'' and 6'' respectively. We compare these maps to VLA maps at 327 MHz and 1420 MHz, and detect the effect of low-frequency absorption in some regions of the remnant due to the presence of free electrons along the line-of-sight. We investigate two origins for the low-frequency free-free absorption that we observe: external absorption from foreground, and internal absorption from Tycho's unshocked ejecta. The external absorption could be due to an ionised thin, diffuse cavity surrounding the SNR (although this cavity would need to be very thin to comply with the neutral fraction required to explain the remnant's optical lines), or it could be due to an over-ionised molecular shell in the vicinity of the remnant. We note that possible ionising sources are the X-ray emission from Tycho, its cosmic rays, or radiation from Tycho's progenitor. For the internal absorption, we are limited by our understanding of the spectral behaviour of the region at unabsorbed radio frequencies. However, the observations are suggestive of free-free absorption from unshocked ejecta inside Tycho's reverse shock.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio

    Wavelet Analysis of Differential TEC Measurements Obtained Using LOFAR

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    Radio interferometers used to make astronomical observations, such as the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR), experience distortions imposed upon the received signal due to the ionosphere as well as those from instrumental errors. Calibration using a well-characterized radio source can be used to mitigate these effects and produce more accurate images of astronomical sources, and the calibration process provides measurements of ionospheric conditions over a wide range of length scales. The basic ionospheric measurement this provides is differential Total Electron Content (TEC, the integral of electron density along the line of sight). Differential TEC measurements made using LOFAR have a precision of < 1 mTECu and therefore enable investigation of ionospheric disturbances which may be undetectable to many other methods. We demonstrate an approach to identify ionospheric waves from these data using a wavelet transform and a simple plane wave model. The noise spectra are robustly characterized to provide uncertainty estimates for the fitted parameters. An example is shown in which this method identifies a wave with an amplitude an order of magnitude below those reported using Global Navigation Systems Satellite TEC measurements. Artificially generated data are used to test the accuracy of the method and establish the range of wavelengths which can be detected using this method with LOFAR data. This technique will enable the use of a large and mostly unexplored data set to study traveling ionospheric disturbances over Europe

    Radio Galaxy Zoo: The Distortion of Radio Galaxies by Galaxy Clusters

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    We study the impact of cluster environment on the morphology of a sample of 4304 extended radio galaxies from Radio Galaxy Zoo. A total of 87% of the sample lies within a projected 15 Mpc of an optically identified cluster. Brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) are more likely than other cluster members to be radio sources, and are also moderately bent. The surface density as a function of separation from cluster center of non-BCG radio galaxies follows a power law with index −1.10±0.03-1.10\pm 0.03 out to 10 r50010~r_{500} (∼7 \sim 7~Mpc), which is steeper than the corresponding distribution for optically selected galaxies. Non-BCG radio galaxies are statistically more bent the closer they are to the cluster center. Within the inner 1.5 r5001.5~r_{500} (∼1 \sim 1~Mpc) of a cluster, non-BCG radio galaxies are statistically more bent in high-mass clusters than in low-mass clusters. Together, we find that non-BCG sources are statistically more bent in environments that exert greater ram pressure. We use the orientation of bent radio galaxies as an indicator of galaxy orbits and find that they are preferentially in radial orbits. Away from clusters, there is a large population of bent radio galaxies, limiting their use as cluster locators; however, they are still located within statistically overdense regions. We investigate the asymmetry in the tail length of sources that have their tails aligned along the radius vector from the cluster center, and find that the length of the inward-pointing tail is weakly suppressed for sources close to the center of the cluster.Comment: 23 pages, 17 figures, 2 tables. Supplemental data files available in The Astronomical Journal or contact autho

    Progress with the LOFAR Imaging Pipeline

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    One of the science drivers of the new Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) is large-area surveys of the low-frequency radio sky. Realizing this goal requires automated processing of the interferometric data, such that fully calibrated images are produced by the system during survey operations. The LOFAR Imaging Pipeline is the tool intended for this purpose, and is now undergoing significant commissioning work. The pipeline is now functional as an automated processing chain. Here we present several recent LOFAR images that have been produced during the still ongoing commissioning period. These early LOFAR images are representative of some of the science goals of the commissioning team members.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figures. Accepted for publication in proceedings of "ISKAF2010 Science Meeting", PoS(ISKAF2010)05

    1-arcsecond imaging strategy for the LoTSS survey using the International LOFAR Telescope

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    We present the first wide area (2.5 x 2.5 square degrees), deep (median noise of approximately 80 microJy per beam) LOFAR High Band Antenna image at a resolution of 1.2 arcseconds by 2 arcseconds. It was generated from an 8-hour International LOFAR Telescope (ILT) observation of the ELAIS-N1 field at frequencies ranging from 120 to 168 MHz with the most up-to-date ILT imaging strategy. This intermediate resolution falls between the highest possible resolution (0.3 arcseconds) achievable by using all International LOFAR Telescope (ILT) baselines and the standard 6-arcsecond resolution in the LoTSS (LOFAR Two-meter Sky Survey) image products utilizing the LOFAR Dutch baselines only. This is the first demonstration of the feasibility of approximately 1 arcsecond imaging using the ILT, providing unique information on source morphology at scales below the surface brightness limits of higher resolutions. The total calibration and imaging time is approximately 52,000 core hours, nearly five times more than producing a 6-arcsecond image. We also present a radio source catalog containing 2263 sources detected over the 2.5 x 2.5 square degrees image of the ELAIS-N1 field, with a peak intensity threshold of 5.5 sigma. The catalog has been cross-matched with the LoTSS deep ELAIS-N1 field radio catalog, and its flux density and positional accuracy have been investigated and corrected accordingly. We find that approximately 80% of sources that we expect to be detectable based on their peak brightness in the LoTSS 6-arcsecond image are detected in this image, which is approximately a factor of two higher than for 0.3 arcsecond imaging in the Lockman Hole, implying there is a wealth of information on these intermediate scales.Comment: Submitted to A&
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