- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/812/81
- Title:
- Arecibo Pulsar-ALFA (PALFA) survey. IV.
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/812/81
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The on-going Arecibo Pulsar-ALFA (PALFA) survey began in 2004 and is searching for radio pulsars in the Galactic plane at 1.4GHz. Here we present a comprehensive description of one of its main data reduction pipelines that is based on the PRESTO software and includes new interference-excision algorithms and candidate selection heuristics. This pipeline has been used to discover 40 pulsars, bringing the survey's discovery total to 144 pulsars. Of the new discoveries, eight are millisecond pulsars (MSPs; P<10ms) and one is a Fast Radio Burst (FRB). This pipeline has also re-detected 188 previously known pulsars, 60 of them previously discovered by the other PALFA pipelines. We present a novel method for determining the survey sensitivity that accurately takes into account the effects of interference and red noise: we inject synthetic pulsar signals with various parameters into real survey observations and then attempt to recover them with our pipeline. We find that the PALFA survey achieves the sensitivity to MSPs predicted by theoretical models but suffers a degradation for P>~100ms that gradually becomes up to ~10 times worse for P>4s at DM<150pc/cm^3^. We estimate 33+/-3% of the slower pulsars are missed, largely due to red noise. A population synthesis analysis using the sensitivity limits we measured suggests the PALFA survey should have found 224+/-16 un-recycled pulsars in the data set analyzed, in agreement with the 241 actually detected. The reduced sensitivity could have implications on estimates of the number of long-period pulsars in the Galaxy.
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Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/VIII/9
- Title:
- Argentina High-Latitude H I Survey
- Short Name:
- VIII/9
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- This survey consists of H I 21-cm spectra covering the southern sky with absolute galactic latitude |b|>10 degrees and a declination dec<-25 degrees. The observations were made with the 30m telescope of the Instituto Argentino de Radioastronomia during 1973 to 1977 and were described in Colomb et al. (1977A&AS...29...89C). The data were obtained by keeping the telescope fixed on the meridian at the desired declination and letting the sky drift through the field. The individual spectra were obtained with a 56-channel filterbank and covering the velocity range from about -40 to +40km/s. The velocity resolution is 2km/s, and the beamwidth is 30arcmin.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/799/10
- Title:
- Arp 220 6 and 33GHz images
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/799/10
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present new Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array radio continuum images of the nuclei of Arp 220, the nearest ultra-luminous infrared galaxy. These new images have both the angular resolution to study the detailed morphologies of the two nuclei that power the galaxy merger and sensitivity to a wide range of spatial scales. At 33GHz, we achieve a resolution of 0.081"x0.063" (29.9x23.3pc) and resolve the radio emission surrounding both nuclei. We conclude from the decomposition of the radio spectral energy distribution that a majority of the 33GHz emission is synchrotron radiation. The spatial distributions of radio emission in both nuclei are well described by exponential profiles. These have deconvolved half-light radii (R_50d_) of 51 and 35pc for the eastern and western nuclei, respectively, and they match the number density profile of radio supernovae observed with very long baseline interferometry. This similarity might be due to the fast cooling of cosmic rays electrons caused by the presence of a strong (~mG) magnetic field in this system. We estimate extremely high molecular gas surface densities of 2.2_-1.0_^+2.1^x10^5^M_{sun}_/pc^2^ (east) and 4.5_-1.9_^+4.5^x10^5^M_{sun}_/pc^2^ (west), corresponding to total hydrogen column densities of N_H_=2.7_-1.2_^+2.7^x10^25^cm^-2^ (east) and 5.6_-2.4_^+5.5^x10^25^cm^-2^ (west). The implied gas volume densities are similarly high, n_H2_~3.8_-1.6_^+3.8^x10^4^cm^-3^ (east) and ~11_-4.5_^+12^x10^4^cm^-3^ (west). We also estimate very high luminosity surface densities of {Sigma}_IR_~4.2_-0.7_^+1.6^x10^13^L_{sun}_/kpc^2^ (east) and {Sigma}_IR_ ~ 9.7_-2.4_^+3.7^x10^13^_L_{sun}/kpc^2^ (west), and star formation rate surface densities of {Sigma}_SFR_~10^3.7+/-0.1^M_{sun}_/yr/kpc^2^ (east) and {Sigma}_SFR_~10^4.1+/-0.1^M_{sun}_/yr/kpc^2^ (west). These values, especially for the western nucleus are, to our knowledge, the highest luminosity surface densities and star formation rate surface densities measured for any star-forming system. Despite these high values, the nuclei appear to lie below the dusty Eddington limit in which radiation pressure is balanced only by self-gravity. The small measured sizes also imply that at wavelengths shorter than {lambda}=1mm, dust absorption effects must play an important role in the observed light distribution while below 5GHz free-free absorption contributes substantial opacity. According to these calculations, the nuclei of Arp 220 are only transparent in the frequency range ~5-350GHz. Our results offer no clear evidence that an active galactic nucleus dominates the emission from either nucleus at 33GHz.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/593/A86
- Title:
- Arp 220 LOFAR radio images at 150MHz
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/593/A86
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We analyse new observations with the International Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) telescope, and archival data from the Multi-Element Radio Linked Interferometer Network (MERLIN) and the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA). We model the spatially resolved radio spectrum of Arp 220 from 150MHz to 33GHz. We present an image of Arp 220 at 150MHz with resolution 0.65"x0.35", sensitivity 0.15mJy/beam, and integrated flux density 394+/-59mJy. More than 80% of the detected flux comes from extended (6"~2.2kpc) steep spectrum (alpha=-0.7) emission, likely from star formation in the molecular disk surrounding the two nuclei. We find elongated features extending 0.3" (110pc) and 0.9" (330pc) from the eastern and western nucleus respectively, which we interpret as evidence for outflows. The extent of radio emission requires acceleration of cosmic rays far outside the nuclei. We find that a simple three component model can explain most of the observed radio spectrum of the galaxy. When accounting for absorption at 1.4GHz, Arp 220 follows the FIR/radio correlation with q=2.36, and we estimate a star formation rate of 220M_{sun}_/yr. We derive thermal fractions at 1GHz of less than 1% for the nuclei, which indicates that a major part of the UV-photons are absorbed by dust. International LOFAR observations shows great promise to detect steep spectrum outflows and probe regions of thermal absorption. However, in LIRGs the emission detected at 150MHz does not necessarily come from the main regions of star formation. This implies that high spatial resolution is crucial for accurate estimates of star formation rates for such galaxies at 150MHz.
115. AS 209 ALMA image
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/610/A24
- Title:
- AS 209 ALMA image
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/610/A24
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- This paper presents new high angular resolution ALMA 1.3mm dust continuum observations of the protoplanetary system AS 209 in the Ophiuchus star forming region. The dust continuum emission is characterized by a main central core and two prominent rings at r=75au and r=130au intervaled by two gaps at at r=62au and r=103au. The two gaps have different widths and depths, with the inner one being narrower and shallower. We determined the surface density of the millimeter dust grains using the 3D radiative transfer disk code dali. According to our fiducial model the inner gap is partially filled with millimeter grains while the outer gap is largely devoid of dust. The inferred surface density is compared to 3D hydrodynamical simulations (FARGO-3D) of planet-disk interaction. The outer dust gap is consistent with the presence of a giant planet (M_planet_~0.8M_Saturn_); the planet is responsible for the gap opening and for the pile-up of dust at the outer edge of the planet orbit. The simulations also show that the same planet could be the origin of the inner gap at r=62au. The relative position of the two dust gaps is close to the 2:1 resonance and we have investigated the possibility of a second planet inside the inner gap. The resulting surface density (including location, width and depth of the two dust gaps) are in agreement with the observations. The properties of the inner gap pose a strong constraint to the mass of the inner planet (M_planet_<0.1M_J_). In both scenarios (single or pair of planets), the hydrodynamical simulations suggest a very low disk viscosity ({alpha}<10^-4^). Given the young age of the system (0.5-1Myr), this result implies that the formation of giant planets occurs on a timescale of <~1Myr.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/701/535
- Title:
- A sample of candidate radio stars
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/701/535
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We conduct a search for radio stars by combining radio and optical data from the FIRST survey (Cat. VIII/71) and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS-DR6, Cat. II/282, obsoleted by II/294). The faint limit of SDSS makes possible a homogeneous search for radio emission from stars of low optical luminosity. We select a sample of 112 candidate radio stars in the magnitude range 15<i<~19.1 and with radio flux S_20_>=1.25mJy, from about 7000deg^2^ of sky. The selection criteria are positional coincidence within 1", radio and optical point source morphology, and an SDSS spectrum classified as stellar. The sample contamination is estimated by random matching to be 108+/-13, suggesting that at most a small fraction of the selected candidates are genuine radio stars. Therefore, we rule out a very rare population of extremely radio-loud stars: no more than 1.2 of every million stars in the magnitude range 15<i<19.1 stars has radio flux S_20_>=1.25mJy. We investigate the optical and radio colors of the sample to find candidates that show the largest likelihood of being real radio stars. The significant outliers from the stellar locus, as well as the magnetically active stars, are the best candidates for follow-up radio observations.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/473/177
- Title:
- A search for pre-biotic molecules
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/473/177
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Low-noise, 0.8MHz resolution spectra around 90GHz towards four hot core sources: Orion KL, W51 e1/e2, S140, and W3(OH), are presented. The observations were performed using the 3mm SIS receiver at the Onsala 20m telescope. The observations were made in the beam-switching mode, the spectrum intensity is given in T_A_^*^ and high-order polynomial baselines have been subtracted. At 90GHz the Onsala 20m telescope has a beam FWHM of ~42arcsec and a main-beam efficiency of ~0.6. Due to changes in frequency setting during the observing period the frequency ranges are not identical for each source, but in all cases the ranges include the transitions used to determine the upper column densities of amino acetonitrile (H_2_NCH_2_CN), vinyl acetylene (C_2_H_3_CCH), oxiranecarbonitrile (c-C_3_H_3_NO), and amino-ethanol (NH_2_CH_2_CH_2_OH), presented in the paper. Note that the absorptions, seen in the S140 and the W3(OH) spectra around the strong HCN-line at 90.663GHz, are artificial.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/506/3540
- Title:
- ASKAP-EMU ESP LMC Radio Continuum Survey
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/506/3540
- Date:
- 17 Jan 2022 11:54:41
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present an analysis of a new 120 deg^2^ radio continuum image of the Large Magellanic Cloud (LMC) at 888MHz with a bandwidth of 288MHz and beam size of 13.9"x12.1", from the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) processed as part of the Evolutionary Map of the Universe (EMU) survey. The median Root Mean Squared noise is 58uJy/beam. We present a catalogue of 54612 sources, divided over a Gold list (30866 sources) complete down to 0.5mJy uniformly across the field, a Silver list (22080 sources) reaching down to <0.2mJy and a Bronze list (1666 sources) of visually inspected sources in areas of high noise and/or near bright complex emission. We discuss detections of planetary nebulae and their radio luminosity function, young stellar objects showing a correlation between radio luminosity and gas temperature, novae and X-ray binaries in the LMC, and active stars in the Galactic foreground that may become a significant population below this flux level. We present examples of diffuse emission in the LMC (HII regions, supernova remnants, bubbles) and distant galaxies showcasing spectacular interaction between jets and intracluster medium. Among 14333 infrared counterparts of the predominantly background radio source population we find that star-forming galaxies become more prominent below 3mJy compared to active galactic nuclei.We combine the new 888MHz data with archival Australia Telescope Compact Array data at 1.4GHz to determine spectral indices; the vast majority display synchrotron emission but flatter spectra occur too. We argue that the most extreme spectral index values are due to variability.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/490/1202
- Title:
- ASKAP EMU ESP, Radio Continuum Survey of the SMC
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/490/1202
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present two new radio continuum images from the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathnder (ASKAP) survey in the direction of the Small Magellanic Cloud (SMC). These images are part of the Evolutionary Map of the Universe (EMU) Early Science Project (ESP) survey of the Small and Large Magellanic Clouds. The two new source lists produced from these images contain radio continuum sources observed at 960MHz (4489 sources) and 1320MHz (5954 sources) with a bandwidth of 192MHz and beam sizes of 30.0"x30.0" and 16.3"x15.1", respectively. The median Root Mean Squared (RMS) noise values are 186Jy/beam (960MHz) and 165Jy/beam (1320MHz). To create point source catalogues, we use these two source lists, together with the previously published Molonglo Observatory Synthesis Telescope (MOST) and the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) point source catalogues to estimate spectral indices for the whole population of radio point sources found in the survey region. Combining our ASKAP catalogues with these radio continuum surveys, we found 7736 point-like sources in common over an area of 30deg^2^. In addition, we report the detection of two new, low surface brightness supernova remnant candidates in the SMC. The high sensitivity of the new ASKAP ESP survey also enabled us to detect the bright end of the SMC planetary nebula sample, with 22 out of 102 optically known planetary nebulae showing point-like radio continuum emission. Lastly, we present several morphologically interesting background radio galaxies.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/ApJ/753/83
- Title:
- Associations to 1FGL sources
- Short Name:
- J/ApJ/753/83
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The Fermi Large Area Telescope (LAT) First Source Catalog (1FGL) provided spatial, spectral, and temporal properties for a large number of {gamma}-ray sources using a uniform analysis method. After correlating with the most-complete catalogs of source types known to emit {gamma} rays, 630 of these sources are "unassociated" (i.e., have no obvious counterparts at other wavelengths). Here, we employ two statistical analyses of the primary {gamma}-ray characteristics for these unassociated sources in an effort to correlate their {gamma}-ray properties with the active galactic nucleus (AGN) and pulsar populations in 1FGL. Based on the correlation results, we classify 221 AGN-like and 134 pulsar-like sources in the 1FGL unassociated sources. The results of these source "classifications" appear to match the expected source distributions, especially at high Galactic latitudes. While useful for planning future multiwavelength follow-up observations, these analyses use limited inputs, and their predictions should not be considered equivalent to "probable source classes" for these sources. We discuss multiwavelength results and catalog cross-correlations to date, and provide new source associations for 229 Fermi-LAT sources that had no association listed in the 1FGL catalog. By validating the source classifications against these new associations, we find that the new association matches the predicted source class in ~80% of the sources.