420 research outputs found
A novel technique for wide-field polarimetry with a radiotelescope array
We report the use of the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) to conduct
polarimetric observations of the sky at 5 GHz. The ATCA is normally operated as
an interferometer array, but these observations were conducted in a split array
mode in which the antenna elements were used as single-dishes with their beams
staggered to simultaneously cover a wide area of sky with a resolution of 10
arcmin. The linearly polarized sky radiation was fully characterized from
measurements, made over a range of parallactic angles, of the cross correlated
signals from the orthogonal linear feeds. We describe the technique and present
a polarimetric image of the Vela supernova remnant made as a test of the
method. The development of the techniques was motivated by the need for
wide-field imaging of the foreground contamination of the polarized component
of the cosmic microwave background signal.Comment: 13 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in A
ATLBS Extended Source Sample: The evolution in radio source morphology with flux density
Based on the ATLBS survey we present a sample of extended radio sources and
derive morphological properties of faint radio sources. 119 radio galaxies form
the ATLBS-Extended Source Sample (ATLBS-ESS) consisting of all sources
exceeding 30" in extent and integrated flux densities exceeding 1 mJy. We give
structural details along with information on galaxy identifications and source
classifications. The ATLBS-ESS, unlike samples with higher flux-density limits,
has almost equal fractions of FR-I and FR-II radio galaxies with a large
fraction of the FR-I population exhibiting 3C31-type structures. Significant
asymmetry in lobe extents appears to be a common occurrence in the ATLBS-ESS
FR-I sources compared to FR-II sources. We present a sample of 22 FR-Is at
z>0.5 with good structural information. The detection of several giant radio
sources, with size exceeding 0.7 Mpc, at z>1 suggests that giant radio sources
are not less common at high redshifts. The ESS also includes a sample of 28
restarted radio galaxies. The relative abundance of dying and restarting
sources is indicative of a model where radio sources undergo episodic activity
in which an active phase is followed by a brief dying phase that terminates
with restarting of the central activity; in any massive elliptical a few such
activity cycles wherein adjacent events blend may constitute the lifetime of a
radio source and such bursts of blended activity cycles may be repeated over
the age of the host. The ATLBS-ESS includes a 2-Mpc giant radio galaxy with the
lowest surface brightness lobes known to date.Comment: 69 pages, 119 figures, 4 tables, to appear in ApJ
CMB observations using the SKA
We examine the prospects for observations of CMB anisotropy with the SKA; we
discuss the advantages of interferometric SKA imaging, observing strategies,
calibration issues and the achievable sensitivity. Although the SKA will
probably operate at cm wavelengths, where discrete source confusion dominates
the CMB anisotropy, its extreme sensitivity to point sources will make it
possible to subtract the source contamination at these wavelengths and thereby
image the low surface brightness CMB anisotropies on small angular scales. The
SKA, operating at 10-20 GHz, may usefully make high-l observations of the CMB
anisotropy spectrum and survey the sky for Sunyaev-Zeldovich decrements.Comment: 4 pages. invited talk presented at the XXVIIth General Assembly of
the URSI, 17-24 Aug 2002, Maastricht, The Netherland
Compact Sunyaev-Zeldovich `hole' in the Bullet Cluster
We present 18~GHz observations of the Bullet cluster from the Australia
Telescope Compact Array; in particular, a high angular resolution measurement
of the substructure in Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect (SZE). We report the discovery
of a compact SZE `hole' in the galaxy cluster. The SZE hole does not correspond
to any bright feature in X-ray, optical or lensing maps; in general, the
relatively deeper SZE features appear to avoid the regions with the most
intense X-ray emission. These imply that the gas pressure distribution differs
significantly from the distributions in gas emission measure, galaxy and dark
matter distributions. This has implications for the gas physics and evolution
in the cluster merger event. SZE displaced from X-ray centres implies that
modeling cluster dynamics is non-trivial; our observations indicate that our
current lack of understanding cluster merger astrophysics may be a limitation
to modeling the cosmological distribution in SZE cluster counts and the cluster
SZE contribution to small-angle cosmic microwave background (CMB) anisotropy.
The SZE distribution in the western parts of the cluster are cospatial with the
radio halo indicative of a common origin for the hot and relativistic electrons
in the turbulent wake of the Bullet.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
ATLBS: the Australia Telescope Low-brightness Survey
We present a radio survey carried out with the Australia Telescope Compact
Array. A motivation for the survey was to make a complete inventory of the
diffuse emission components as a step towards a study of the cosmic evolution
in radio source structure and the contribution from radio-mode feedback on
galaxy evolution. The Australia Telescope low-brightness survey (ATLBS) at 1388
MHz covers 8.42 sq deg of the sky in an observing mode designed to yield images
with exceptional surface brightness sensitivity and low confusion. The ATLBS
radio images, made with 0.08 mJy/beam rms noise and 50" beam, detect a total of
1094 sources with peak flux exceeding 0.4 mJy/beam. The ATLBS source counts
were corrected for blending, noise bias, resolution, and primary beam
attenuation; the normalized differential source counts are consistent with no
upturn down to 0.6 mJy. The percentage integrated polarization Pi_0 was
computed after corrections for the polarization bias in integrated polarized
intensity; Pi_0 shows an increasing trend with decreasing flux density.
Simultaneous visibility measurements made with longer baselines yielded images,
with 5" beam, of compact components in sources detected in the survey. The
observations provide a measurement of the complexity and diffuse emission
associated with mJy and sub-mJy radio sources. 10% of the ATLBS sources have
more than half of their flux density in extended emission and the fractional
flux in diffuse components does not appear to vary with flux density, although
the percentage of sources that have complex structure increases with flux
density. The observations are consistent with a transition in the nature of
extended radio sources from FR-II radio source morphology, which dominates the
mJy population, to FR-I structure at sub-mJy flux density. (Abridged)Comment: 18 pages, 8 figues, 6 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA
Hydrogen 2p--2s transition: signals from the epochs of recombination and reionization
We propose a method to study the epoch of reionization based on the possible
observation of 2p--2s fine structure lines from the neutral hydrogen outside
the cosmological H {\sc ii} regions enveloping QSOs and other ionizing sources
in the reionization era. We show that for parameters typical of luminous
sources observed at the strength of this signal, which is
proportional to the H {\sc i} fraction, has a brightness temperature for a fully neutral medium. The fine structure line from this redshift
is observable at and we discuss prospects for the
detection with several operational and future radio telescopes. We also compute
the characteristics of this signal from the epoch of recombination: the peak
brightness is expected to be ; this signal appears in the
frequency range 5-10 MHz. The signal from the recombination era is nearly
impossible to detect owing to the extreme brightness of the Galactic emission
at these frequencies.Comment: 17 pages, 1 figure, to appear in Ap
Variable X-ray Absorption toward Gravitationally-Lensed Blazar PKS1830-211
We present X-ray spectral analysis of five Chandra and XMM-Newton
observations of the gravitationally-lensed blazar PKS1830-211 from 2000 to
2004. We show that the X-ray absorption toward PKS1830-211 is variable, and the
variable absorption is most likely to be intrinsic with amplitudes of about
2-30e22 cm^-2 depending on whether or not the absorber is partially covering
the X-ray source. Our results confirm the variable absorption observed
previously, although interpreted differently, in a sequence of ASCA
observations. This large variation in the absorption column density can be
interpreted as outflows from the central engine in the polar direction,
consistent with recent numerical models of inflow/outflows in AGNs. In
addition, it could possibly be caused by the interaction between the blazar jet
and its environment, or the variation from the geometric configuration of the
jet. While the spectra can also be fitted with a variable absorption at the
lens redshift, we show that this model is unlikely. We also rule out the simple
microlensing interpretation of variability which was previously suggested.Comment: 15 pages, 4 figures, Accepted to A
A deep survey of the low-surface-brightness radio sky
We have made a radio survey--the Australia Telescope Low Brightness Survey
(ATLBS)--of 8.4 square degrees sky area, using the Australia Telescope Compact
Array in the 20-cm band, in an observing mode designed to provide wide-field
images with exceptional sensitivity in surface brightness, and thereby explore
a new parameter space in radio source populations. The goals of this survey are
to quantify the distribution in angular sizes, particularly at weak surface
brightness levels: this has implications for the confusion in deep surveys with
the SKA. The survey is expected to lead to a census of the radio emission
associated with low-power radio galaxies at redshifts 1-3, without any missing
extended emission, and hence a study of the cosmic evolution of low-power radio
galaxies to higher redshift and a comprehensive study of the AGN feedback
during the intense black hole growth phase during this redshift range.Comment: 5 pages, includes 2 figures and 1 table. To appear in the proceedings
of "From Planets to Dark energy: the modern radio universe" in the online
journal Proceedings of Science - Po
An Australia telescope survey for CMB anisotropies
We have surveyed six distinct `empty fields' using the Australia Telescope
Compact Array in an ultra-compact configuration with the aim of imaging, with a
high brightness sensitivity, any arcmin-scale brightness-temperature
anisotropies in the background radio sky. The six well-separated regions were
observed at a frequency of 8.7 GHz and the survey regions were limited by the
ATCA primary beams which have a full width at half maximum of 6 arcmin at this
frequency; all fields were observed with a resolution of 2 arcmin and an rms
thermal noise of 24 microJy/beam. After subtracting foreground confusion
detected in higher resolution images of the fields, residual fluctuations in
Stokes I images are consistent with the expectations from thermal noise and
weaker (unidentified) foreground sources; the Stokes Q and U images are
consistent with expectations from thermal noise.
Within the sensitivity of our observations, we have no reason to believe that
there are any Sunyaev-Zeldovich holes in the microwave sky surveyed. Assuming
Gaussian-form CMB anisotropy with a `flat' spectrum, we derive 95 per cent
confidence upper limits of Q_flat < 10--11 microK in polarized intensity and
Q_flat < 25 microK in total intensity. The ATCA filter function peaks at l=4700
and has half maximum values at l=3350 and 6050.Comment: 17 pages, includes 8 figures and 6 tables, accepted for publication
in MNRA
An ASCA Study of the W51 Complex
We present the analysis of ASCA archival data from the Galactic source W51.
The ASCA spectra show that the soft (kT<= 2.5 keV) X-rays are of thermal origin
and are compatible with W51C being a single, isothermal (kT~0.3 keV) supernova
remnant at the far-side of the Sagittarius arm. The ASCA images reveal hard
(kT>=2.5 keV) X-ray sources which were not seen in previous X-ray observations.
Some of these sources are coincident with massive star-forming regions and the
spectra are used to derive X-ray parameters. By comparing the X-ray absorbing
column density with atomic hydrogen column density, we infer the location of
star-forming regions relative to molecular clouds. There are unidentified hard
X-ray sources superposed on the supernova remnant and we discuss the
possibility of their association.Comment: 13 pages, 11 figures, to be published in Astronomical Journa
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