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The cold neutral medium (CNM) represents gas at temperature T ∼ 80 K and number density n ∼ 40 cm-−3, where heating by photoelectrons ejected from dust grains balances cooling by fine-structure line emission from C+. The cold neutral medium is studied by looking at the absorption lines caused by the CNM along the line of sight to bright background stars. Interpreting these absorption lines requires solving the equation of radiative transfer. In particular, the curve of growth for an absorption line yields the relation between the observed equivalent width of a line and the underlying column density of the atom or ion giving rise to the absorption.
The warm ionized medium (WIM) represents gas at T ~ 8000 K and n ~ 0.2 cm−3, where heating by a variety of mechanisms balances cooling by fine-structure line emission from oxygen and Lyman alpha emission from hydrogen. Ionized nebulae, such as H ii regions around hot stars and planetary nebulae around newly unveiled white dwarfs, have temperatures similar to the WIM, but much higher density. Ionized nebulae can be idealized as spherical Strömgren spheres. The physics of an ionized nebula is made more complex (and interesting!) by the presence of helium and “metals.” Emission lines from oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur, and other metals both help to cool an ionized nebula and provide useful diagnostic tools to determine observationally the density and temperature of the nebula.
The warm neutral medium (WNM) represents gas at T ∼ 6000 K and n ∼ 0.4 cm−3, where heating by photoelectrons from dust grains balances cooling by fine-structure line emission from oxygen. The warm neutral medium is studied by looking at 21 cm emission from the hyperfine transition of the ground state of hydrogen. The upper hyperfine level is excited and de-excited primarily by collisions with gas particles. The relatively rare radiative de-excitations, however, produce 21 cm photons that are a useful diagnostic of neutral hydrogen. All-sky maps of 21 cm intensity (commonly expressed as an “antenna temperature”) can be translated into a map of the column density of neutral hydrogen.
The circumgalactic medium (CGM) is the gas that lies outside the main stellar distribution of a galaxy, but inside its virial radius. The first part of our own galaxy’s CGM to be discovered was a population of high-velocity clouds, discovered through the 21 cm emission of their neutral hydrogen. The high-velocity clouds, however, are embedded within hotter components of the CGM, with temperatures ranging from 104 K to 106 K. These hotter components can be detected through absorption and emission lines of ionized metals such as oxygen. The intracluster medium (ICM) is the gas that lies inside the virial radius of a cluster of galaxies, but which is not associated with any individual galaxy. The ICM can be detected and studied through its free--free emission, which indicates temperatures as high as 108 K.
The hot ionized medium (HIM) represents gas at T ∼ 106 K and n ∼ 0.004 cm−3. It constitutes gas that has been shock-heated by supernova explosions, and which has not yet had time to cool by free--free emission. The properties of a spherically expanding shock front are described by the Sedov–Taylor solution; when radiative losses from the post-shock gas are large, the expanding supernova remnant transitions to the snowplow solution. The hot gas inside a supernova-blown bubble is in collisional ionization equilibrium, which permits a calculation of the ionization state of each element as a function of temperature. Emission lines from ionized iron and absorption lines of ionized oxygen (seen in absorption toward hot white dwarfs) provide information about the density and temperature of the hot gas in the Local Bubble within which the Sun lies.
The warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM) is the hottest portion of the intergalactic medium; its temperature 105 K < T < 107 K is the result of shock heating as gas flows along the filaments of the cosmic web. Numerical simulations indicate that the WHIM is only now overtaking the cooler DIM as the more massive component of intergalactic gas. The WHIM is difficult to detect – to the point where astronomers long complained of a “missing baryon problem.” However, the cooler portions of the WHIM can be detected by looking for absorption lines of O vi along lines of sight to bright quasars. The portion of the WHIM at T ∼ 106 K can be detected from absorption lines of O vii. The very hottest portion of the WHIM, it is hoped, will be detected from absorption lines of iron, which still clings to its innermost electrons at T ∼ 107 K.
The diffuse intergalactic medium (DIM) is photoionized gas at temperature T < 105 K that lies outside galaxies and clusters. The absence of the Gunn–Peterson effect (optically thick absorption by Lyman alpha) at low redshifts indicates that the DIM is almost entirely ionized today. The hydrogen gas filling the universe was also almost entirely ionized soon after the Big Bang; however, at a redshift z ∼ 1400, the hydrogen went from being ionized to being neutral. The end of the era of neutrality came at a redshift z ∼ 7, when the earliest hot massive stars had emitted enough UV photons to reionize the intergalactic gas. Today, within the mostly ionized DIM, there exist regions of higher neutral hydrogen density; these regions give rise to the Lyman alpha forest of absorption lines seen in the spectra of relatively low-redshift quasars.
Molecular clouds contain gas at T ∼ 15 K and at densities of n ∼ 100 cm^-−3 and upward. Although provides the overwhelming majority of molecules in a molecular cloud, the absence of an electric dipole in the symmetric molecule means it is difficult to observe. The 2.6 mm emission from the rotational transition in is among the most useful ways to observe molecular gas. Most molecular clouds, however, are optically thick to the 2.6 mm emission from ; seeing to their centers requires observing the scarcer isotopologue rather than the more abundant . Within dusty, optically thick molecular clouds, molecules are made by dust grain catalysis. In the surface layers of molecular clouds, molecules are destroyed through photodissociation by ultraviolet light. However, molecular clouds are self-shielded from UV outside the cloud.
We detect and characterise extended, diffuse radio emission from galaxy clusters at 168 MHz within the Epoch of Reionization 0-h field: a $45^{\circ} \times 45^{\circ}$ region of the southern sky centred on R. A.${}= 0^{\circ}$, decl.${}=-27^{\circ}$. We detect 29 sources of interest; a newly detected halo in Abell 0141; a newly detected relic in Abell 2751; 4 new halo candidates and a further 4 new relic candidates; and a new phoenix candidate in Abell 2556. Additionally, we find nine clusters with unclassifiable, diffuse steep-spectrum emission as well as a candidate double relic system associated with RXC J2351.0-1934. We present measured source properties such as their integrated flux densities, spectral indices ($\alpha$, where $S_\nu \propto \nu^\alpha$), and sizes where possible. We find several of the diffuse sources to have ultra-steep spectra including the halo in Abell 0141, if confirmed, showing $\alpha \leq -2.1 \pm 0.1$ with the present data making it one of the steepest-spectrum haloes known. Finally, we compare our sample of haloes with previously detected haloes and revisit established scaling relations of the radio halo power ($P_{1.4}$) with the cluster X-ray luminosity ($L_{\textrm{X}}$) and mass ($M_{500}$). We find that the newly detected haloes and candidate haloes are consistent with the $P_{1.4}$–$L_{\textrm{X}}$ and $P_{1.4}$–$M_{500}$ relations and see an increase in scatter in the previously found relations with increasing sample size likely caused by inhomogeneous determination of $P_{1.4}$ across the full halo sample. We show that the MWA is capable of detecting haloes and relics within most of the galaxy clusters within the Planck catalogue of Sunyaev–Zel’dovich sources depending on exact halo or relic properties.
We present the results of our extensive binary orbital motion corrected pulsation search for 13 low-mass X-ray binaries. These selected sources exhibit burst oscillations in X-rays with frequencies ranging from 45 to 1 122 Hz and have a binary orbital period varying from 2.1 to 18.9 h. We first determined episodes that contain weak pulsations around the burst oscillation frequency by searching all archival Rossi X-ray Timing Explorer data of these sources. Then, we applied Doppler corrections to these pulsation episodes to discard the smearing effect of the binary orbital motion and searched for recovered pulsations at the second stage. Here we report 75 pulsation episodes that contain weak but coherent pulsations around the burst oscillation frequency. Furthermore, we report eight new episodes that show relatively strong pulsations in the binary orbital motion corrected data.
In this paper, we describe the system design and capabilities of the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) radio telescope at the conclusion of its construction project and commencement of science operations. ASKAP is one of the first radio telescopes to deploy phased array feed (PAF) technology on a large scale, giving it an instantaneous field of view that covers $31\,\textrm{deg}^{2}$ at $800\,\textrm{MHz}$. As a two-dimensional array of 36$\times$12 m antennas, with baselines ranging from 22 m to 6 km, ASKAP also has excellent snapshot imaging capability and 10 arcsec resolution. This, combined with 288 MHz of instantaneous bandwidth and a unique third axis of rotation on each antenna, gives ASKAP the capability to create high dynamic range images of large sky areas very quickly. It is an excellent telescope for surveys between 700 and $1800\,\textrm{MHz}$ and is expected to facilitate great advances in our understanding of galaxy formation, cosmology, and radio transients while opening new parameter space for discovery of the unknown.
The remnant phase of a radio galaxy begins when the jets launched from an active galactic nucleus are switched off. To study the fraction of radio galaxies in a remnant phase, we take advantage of a $8.31$ deg$^2$ subregion of the GAMA 23 field which comprises of surveys covering the frequency range 0.1–9 GHz. We present a sample of 104 radio galaxies compiled from observations conducted by the Murchison Widefield Array (216 MHz), the Australia Square Kilometer Array Pathfinder (887 MHz), and the Australia Telescope Compact Array (5.5 GHz). We adopt an ‘absent radio core’ criterion to identify 10 radio galaxies showing no evidence for an active nucleus. We classify these as new candidate remnant radio galaxies. Seven of these objects still display compact emitting regions within the lobes at 5.5 GHz; at this frequency the emission is short-lived, implying a recent jet switch off. On the other hand, only three show evidence of aged lobe plasma by the presence of an ultra-steep-spectrum ($\alpha<-1.2$) and a diffuse, low surface brightness radio morphology. The predominant fraction of young remnants is consistent with a rapid fading during the remnant phase. Within our sample of radio galaxies, our observations constrain the remnant fraction to $4\%\lesssim f_{\mathrm{rem}} \lesssim 10\%$; the lower limit comes from the limiting case in which all remnant candidates with hotspots are simply active radio galaxies with faint, undetected radio cores. Finally, we model the synchrotron spectrum arising from a hotspot to show they can persist for 5–10 Myr at 5.5 GHz after the jets switch of—radio emission arising from such hotspots can therefore be expected in an appreciable fraction of genuine remnants.
In Einstein’s special theory of relativity, all observers measure the speed of light, c, to be the same. However, this refers to the round-trip speed, where a clock at the origin times the outward and return trip of light reflecting off a distant mirror. Measuring the one-way speed of light is fraught with issues of clock synchronisation, and, as long as the average speed of light remains c, the speeds on the outward and return legs could be different. One objection to this anisotropic speed of light is that views of the distant universe would be different in different directions, especially with regard to the ages of observed objects and the smoothness of the Cosmic Microwave Background. In this paper, we explore this in the Milne universe, the limiting case of a Friedmann–Robertson–Walker universe containing no matter, radiation, or dark energy. Given that this universe is empty, it can be mapped onto flat Minkowski space-time and so can be explored in terms of the one-way speed of light. The conclusion is that the presence of an anisotropic speed of light leads to anisotropic time dilation effects, and hence observers in the Milne universe would be presented with an isotropic view of the distant cosmos.
One of the basic parameters of a charge coupled device (CCD) camera is its gain, that is, the number of detected electrons per output Analogue to Digital Unit (ADU). This is normally determined by finding the statistical variances from a series of flat-field exposures with nearly constant levels over substantial areas, and making use of the fact that photon (Poisson) noise has variance equal to the mean. However, when a CCD has been installed in a spectroscopic instrument fed by numerous optical fibres, or with an echelle format, it is no longer possible to obtain illumination that is constant over large areas. Instead of making do with selected small areas, it is shown here that the wide variation of signal level in a spectroscopic ‘flat-field’ can be used to obtain accurate values of the CCD gain, needing only a matched pair of exposures (that differ in their realisation of the noise). Once the gain is known, the CCD readout noise (in electrons) is easily found from a pair of bias frames. Spatial stability of the image in the two flat-fields is important, although correction of minor shifts is shown to be possible, at the expense of further analysis.
The past few decades have seen the burgeoning of wide-field, high-cadence surveys, the most formidable of which will be the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) to be conducted by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory. So new is the field of systematic time-domain survey astronomy; however, that major scientific insights will continue to be obtained using smaller, more flexible systems than the LSST. One such example is the Gravitational-wave Optical Transient Observer (GOTO) whose primary science objective is the optical follow-up of gravitational wave events. The amount and rate of data production by GOTO and other wide-area, high-cadence surveys presents a significant challenge to data processing pipelines which need to operate in near-real time to fully exploit the time domain. In this study, we adapt the Rubin Observatory LSST Science Pipelines to process GOTO data, thereby exploring the feasibility of using this ‘off-the-shelf’ pipeline to process data from other wide-area, high-cadence surveys. In this paper, we describe how we use the LSST Science Pipelines to process raw GOTO frames to ultimately produce calibrated coadded images and photometric source catalogues. After comparing the measured astrometry and photometry to those of matched sources from PanSTARRS DR1, we find that measured source positions are typically accurate to subpixel levels, and that measured L-band photometries are accurate to $\sim50$ mmag at $m_L\sim16$ and $\sim200$ mmag at $m_L\sim18$. These values compare favourably to those obtained using GOTO’s primary, in-house pipeline, gotophoto, in spite of both pipelines having undergone further development and improvement beyond the implementations used in this study. Finally, we release a generic ‘obs package’ that others can build upon, should they wish to use the LSST Science Pipelines to process data from other facilities.
We present a radio and X-ray analysis of the galaxy cluster SPT-CL J2032–5627. Investigation of public data from the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) at 943 MHz shows two previously undetected radio relics at either side of the cluster. For both relic sources, we utilise archival Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) data at 5.5 GHz in conjunction with the new ASKAP data to determine that both have steep integrated radio spectra ($\ensuremath{{\alpha_\mathrm{SE} = -1.52 \pm 0.10}}$ and $\ensuremath{{\alpha_\mathrm{NW,full} = -1.18 \pm 0.10}}$ for the southeast and northwest relic sources, respectively). No shock is seen in XMM-Newton observations; however, the southeast relic is preceded by a cold front in the X-ray–emitting intra-cluster medium. We suggest the lack of a detectable shock may be due to instrumental limitations, comparing the situation to the southeast relic in Abell 3667. We compare the relics to the population of double relic sources and find that they are located below the current power–mass scaling relation. We present an analysis of the low-surface brightness sensitivity of ASKAP and the ATCA, the excellent sensitivity of both allow the ability to find heretofore undetected diffuse sources, suggesting these low-power radio relics will become more prevalent in upcoming large-area radio surveys such as the Evolutionary Map of the Universe.