885 research outputs found
An Automated Scalable Framework for Distributing Radio Astronomy Processing Across Clusters and Clouds
The Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) radio telescope is an international aperture synthesis radio telescope used to study the Universe at low frequencies. One of the goals of the LOFAR telescope is to conduct deep wide-field surveys. Here we will discuss a framework for the processing of the LOFAR Two Meter Sky Survey (LoTSS). This survey will produce close to 50 PB of data within five years. These data rates require processing at locations with high-speed access to the archived data. To complete the LoTSS project, the processing software needs to be made portable and moved to clusters with a high bandwidth connection to the data archive. This work presents a framework that makes the LOFAR software portable, and is used to scale out LOFAR data reduction. Previous work was successful in pre-processing LOFAR data on a cluster of isolated nodes. This framework builds upon it and and is currently operational. It is designed to be portable, scalable, automated and general. This paper describes its design and high level operation and the initial results processing LoTSS data
LOFAR early-time search for coherent radio emission from GRB 180706A
© 2019 The Author(s) Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society.The nature of the central engines of gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) and the composition of their relativistic jets are still under debate. If the jets are Poynting flux dominated rather than baryon dominated, a coherent radio flare from magnetic re-connection events might be expected with the prompt gamma-ray emission. There are two competing models for the central engines of GRBs; a black hole or a newly formed milli-second magnetar. If the central engine is a magnetar it is predicted to produce coherent radio emission as persistent or flaring activity. In this paper, we present the deepest limits to date for this emission following LOFAR rapid response observations of GRB 180706A. No emission is detected to a 3 limit of 1.7 mJy beam at 144 MHz in a two-hour LOFAR observation starting 4.5 minutes after the gamma-ray trigger. A forced source extraction at the position of GRB 180706A provides a marginally positive (1 sigma) peak flux density of mJy. The data were time-sliced into different sets of snapshot durations to search for FRB like emission. No short duration emission was detected at the location of the GRB. We compare these results to theoretical models and discuss the implications of a non-detection.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
Searching for the largest bound atoms in space
(abridged) Radio recombination lines (RRLs) at frequencies < 250 MHz
trace the cold, diffuse phase of the ISM. Next generation low frequency
interferometers, such as LOFAR, MWA and the future SKA, with unprecedented
sensitivity, resolution, and large fractional bandwidths, are enabling the
exploration of the extragalactic RRL universe. We observed the radio quasar 3C
190 (z~1.2) with the LOFAR HBA. In reducing this data for spectroscopic
analysis, we have placed special emphasis on bandpass calibration. We devised
cross-correlation techniques to significantly identify the presence of RRLs in
a low frequency spectrum. We demonstrate the utility of this method by applying
it to existing low-frequency spectra of Cassiopeia A and M 82, and to the new
observations of 3C 190. RRLs have been detected in the foreground of 3C 190 at
z = 1.12355 (assuming a carbon origin), owing to the first detection of RRLs
outside of the local universe (first reported in Emig et al. 2019). Towards the
Galactic supernova remnant Cas A, we uncover three new detections: (1)
C-transitions (n = 5) for the first time at low radio
frequencies, (2) H-transitions at 64 MHz with a FWHM of 3.1 km/s, the
most narrow and one of the lowest frequency detections of hydrogen to date, and
(3) C at v = 0 km/s in the frequency range 55-78 MHz for the
first time. Additionally we recover C, C, C, and
C from the -47 km/s and -38 km/s components. In the nearby starburst
galaxy, M 82, we do not find a significant feature. Our current searches for
RRLs in LOFAR observations are limited to narrow (< 100 km/s) features, owing
to the relatively small number of channels available for continuum estimation.
Future strategies making use of larger contiguous frequency coverage would aid
calibration to deeper sensitivities and broader features.Comment: 21 pages, 21 figures, accepted in A&
LOFAR discovery of an ultra-steep radio halo and giant head-tail radio galaxy in Abell 1132
Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) observations at 144 MHz have revealed large-scale radio sources in the unrelaxed galaxy cluster Abell 1132. The cluster hosts diffuse radio emission on scales of ~650 kpc near the cluster centre and a head-tail (HT) radio galaxy, extending up to 1 Mpc, south of the cluster centre. The central diffuse radio emission is not seen in NRAO VLA FIRST Survey, Westerbork Northern Sky Survey, nor in C & D array VLA observations at 1.4 GHz, but is detected in our follow-up Giant Meterwave Radio Telescope (GMRT) observations at 325 MHz. Using LOFAR and GMRT data, we determine the spectral index of the central diffuse emission to be a =-1.75 ± 0.19 (S a va).We classify this emission as an ultra-steep spectrum radio halo and discuss the possible implications for the physical origin of radio haloes. The HT radio galaxy shows narrow, collimated emission extending up to 1 Mpc and another 300 kpc of more diffuse, disturbed emission, giving a full projected linear size of 1.3Mpc - classifying it as a giant radio galaxy (GRG) and making it the longest HT found to date. The head of the GRG coincides with an elliptical galaxy (SDSS J105851.01+564308.5) belonging to Abell 1132. In our LOFAR image, there appears to be a connection between the radio halo and the GRG. The turbulence that may have produced the halo may have also affected the tail of the GRG. In turn, the GRG may have provided seed electrons for the radio halo
LOFAR discovery of a radio halo in the high-redshift galaxy cluster PSZ2 G099.86+58.45
© 2019 IOP Publishing Ltd. This is an author-created, un-copyedited version of an article accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal Letters. IOP Publishing Ltd is not responsible for any errors or omissions in this version of the manuscript or any version derived from it.In this Letter, we report the discovery of a radio halo in the high-redshift galaxy cluster PSZ2 G099.86+58.45 () with the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR) at 120-168 MHz. This is one of the most distant radio halos discovered so far. The diffuse emission extends over 1 Mpc and has a morphology similar to that of the X-ray emission as revealed by XMM-Newton data. The halo is very faint at higher frequencies and is barely detected by follow-up 1-2 GHz Karl G.~Jansky Very Large Array (JVLA) observations, which enable us to constrain the radio spectral index to be , i.e.; with properties between canonical and ultra-steep spectrum radio halos. Radio halos are currently explained as synchrotron radiation from relativistic electrons that are re-accelerated in the intra-cluster medium (ICM) by turbulence driven by energetic mergers. We show that in such a framework radio halos are expected to be relatively common at MHz () in clusters with mass and redshift similar to PSZ2 G099.86+58.45; however, at least 2/3 of these radio halos should have steep spectrum and thus be very faint above GHz frequencies. Furthermore, since the luminosity of radio halos at high redshift depends strongly on the magnetic field strength in the hosting clusters, future LOFAR observations will also provide vital information on the origin and amplification of magnetic fields in galaxy clusters.Peer reviewedFinal Accepted Versio
Alignment in the orientation of LOFAR radio sources
©ESO 2020. The original publication is available at https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202037680Various studies have laid claim to finding an alignment of the polarization vectors or radio jets of active galactic nuclei (AGN) over large distances, but these results have proven controversial and so far, there is no clear explanation for this observed alignment. To investigate this case further, we tested the hypothesis that the position angles of radio galaxies are randomly oriented in the sky by using data from the Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) Two-metre Sky Survey (LoTSS). A sample of 7,555 double-lobed radio galaxies was extracted from the list of 318,520 radio sources in the first data release of LoTSS at 150 MHz. We performed statistical tests for uniformity of the two-dimensional (2D) orientations for the complete 7,555 source sample. We also tested the orientation uniformity in three dimensions (3D) for the 4,212 source sub-sample with photometric or spectroscopic redshifts. Our sample shows a significant deviation from uniformity (p-value <) in the 2D analysis at angular scales of about four degrees, mainly caused by sources with the largest flux densities. No significant alignment was found in the 3D analysis. Although the 3D analysis has access to fewer sources and suffers from uncertainties in the photometric redshift, the lack of alignment in 3D points towards the cause of the observed effect being unknown systematics or biases that predominantly affect the brightest sources, although this has yet to be demonstrated irrefutably and should be the subject of subsequent studies.Peer reviewe
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