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91探花
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Katherine Blundell OBE

Professor of Astrophysics

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics
  • Plasma physics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Global Jet Watch
  • Pulsars, transients and relativistic astrophysics
Katherine.Blundell@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73308
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 707
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The Global Jet Watch

Radio image of the microquasar SS433
The micro quasar SS433

The 6C** sample and the highest redshift radio galaxies

(2004) 141-142

Authors:

MJ Cruz, MJ Jarvis, KM Blundell, S Rawlings

Abstract:

We present a new radio sample, 6C** designed to find radio galaxies at z > 4 and discuss some of its near-infrared imaging follow-up results.

Exploring the Nature of Weak Chandra Sources near the Galactic Centre

(2003)

Authors:

RM Bandyopadhyay, KM Blundell, Ph Podsiadlowski, JCA Miller-Jones, QD Wang, WN Brandt, S Rappaport, E Pfahl

Time-sequenced Multi-Radio-Frequency Observations of Cygnus X-3 in Flare

ArXiv astro-ph/0311277 (2003)

Authors:

James CA Miller-Jones, Katherine M Blundell, Michael P Rupen, Amy J Mioduszewski, Peter Duffy, Anthony J Beasley

Abstract:

Multifrequency observations from the VLA, VLBA and OVRO Millimeter Array of a major radio outburst of Cygnus X-3 in 2001 September are presented, measuring the evolution of the spectrum of the source over three decades in frequency, over a period of six days. Following the peak of the flare, as the intensity declines the high-frequency spectrum at frequency nu steepens from nu^{-0.4} to nu^{-0.6}, after which the spectral index remains at this latter terminal value; a trend previously observed but hitherto not satisfactorily explained. VLBA observations, for the first time, track over several days the expansion of a sequence of knots whose initial diameters are approximately 8 milliarcseconds. The light-crossing time within these plasmons is of the same order as the time-scale over which the spectrum is observed to evolve. We contend that properly accounting for light-travel time effects in and between plasmons which are initially optically thick, but which after expansion become optically thin, explains the key features of the spectral evolution, for example the observed timescale. Using the VLBA images, we have directly measured for the first time the proper motions of individual knots, analysis of which shows a two-sided jet whose axis is precessing. The best-fit jet speed is roughly beta = 0.63 and the precession period is about 5 days, significantly lower than fitted for a previous flare. Extrapolation of the positions of the knots measured by the VLBA back to zero-separation shows this to occur approximately 2.5 days after the detection of the rise in flux density of Cygnus X-3.

Time-sequenced Multi-Radio-Frequency Observations of Cygnus X-3 in Flare

(2003)

Authors:

James CA Miller-Jones, Katherine M Blundell, Michael P Rupen, Amy J Mioduszewski, Peter Duffy, Anthony J Beasley

A Relativistic Jet in the Radio-quiet Quasar PG 1407+263

Astrophysical Journal Letters 591 (2003) L103-L106

Authors:

KM Blundell, Anthony J. Beasley, Geoffrey V. Bicknell

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