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91̽»¨
Black Hole

Lensing of space time around a black hole. At 91̽»¨ we study black holes observationally and theoretically on all size and time scales - it is some of our core work.

Credit: ALAIN RIAZUELO, IAP/UPMC/CNRS. CLICK HERE TO VIEW MORE IMAGES.

Prof. Matt Jarvis

Professor of Astrophysics

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Cosmology
  • Galaxy formation and evolution
  • Hintze Centre for Astrophysical Surveys
  • MeerKAT
  • Rubin-LSST
  • The Square Kilometre Array (SKA)
Matt.Jarvis@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)83654
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 703
  • About
  • Publications

MIGHTEE: deep 1.4 GHz source counts and the sky temperature contribution of star forming galaxies and active galactic nuclei

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press 520:2 (2022) 2668-2691

Authors:

Cl Hale, Ih Whittam, Mj Jarvis, Pn Best, Nl Thomas, I Heywood, M Prescott, N Adams, J Afonso, Fangxia An, Raa Bowler, Jd Collier, Rhw Cook, R Davé, Bs Frank, M Glowacki, Pw Hatfield, S Kolwa, Cc Lovell, N Maddox, L Marchetti, Lk Morabito, E Murphy, I Prandoni, Z Randriamanakoto, Ar Taylor

Abstract:

We present deep 1.4 GHz source counts from ∼5 deg2 of the continuum Early Science data release of the MeerKAT International Gigahertz Tiered Extragalactic Exploration (MIGHTEE) survey down to S1.4GHz ∼15 μJy. Using observations over two extragalactic fields (COSMOS and XMM-LSS), we provide a comprehensive investigation into correcting the incompleteness of the raw source counts within the survey to understand the true underlying source count population. We use a variety of simulations that account for: errors in source detection and characterisation, clustering, and variations in the assumed source model used to simulate sources within the field and characterise source count incompleteness. We present these deep source count distributions and use them to investigate the contribution of extragalactic sources to the sky background temperature at 1.4 GHz using a relatively large sky area. We then use the wealth of ancillary data covering a subset of the COSMOS field to investigate the specific contributions from both active galactic nuclei (AGN) and star forming galaxies (SFGs) to the source counts and sky background temperature. We find, similar to previous deep studies, that we are unable to reconcile the sky temperature observed by the ARCADE 2 experiment. We show that AGN provide the majority contribution to the sky temperature contribution from radio sources, but the relative contribution of SFGs rises sharply below 1 mJy, reaching an approximate 15-25 per cent contribution to the total sky background temperature (Tb ∼100 mK) at ∼15 μJy.

MIGHTEE-Hi: evolution of hi scaling relations of star-forming galaxies at z < 0.5* * released on July 29, 2022

Astrophysical Journal Letters IOP Science 935:1 (2022) L13

Authors:

F Sinigaglia, G Rodighiero, E Elson, M Vaccari, N Maddox, Bs Frank, Mj Jarvis, T Oosterloo, R Davé, M Salvato, M Baes, S Bellstedt, L Bisigello, Jd Collier, Rhw Cook, Ljm Davies, J Delhaize, Sp Driver, C Foster, S Kurapati, Cd Claudia, C Lidman, Pe Mancera Piña, Mj Meyer, Km Mogotsi, H Pan, Aa Ponomareva, I Prandoni, Sha Rajohnson, Asg Robotham, Mg Santos, S Sekhar, K Spekkens, Je Thorne, Jm van der Hulst, Oi Wong

Abstract:

We present the first measurements of H i galaxy scaling relations from a blind survey at z > 0.15. We perform spectral stacking of 9023 spectra of star-forming galaxies undetected in H i at 0.23 < z < 0.49, extracted from MIGHTEE-H i Early Science data cubes, acquired with the MeerKAT radio telescope. We stack galaxies in bins of galaxy properties (stellar mass M *, star formation rateSFR, and specific star formation rate sSFR, with sSFR ≡ M */SFR), obtaining ≳5σ detections in most cases, the strongest H i-stacking detections to date in this redshift range. With these detections, we are able to measure scaling relations in the probed redshift interval, finding evidence for a moderate evolution from the median redshift of our sample z med ∼ 0.37 to z ∼ 0. In particular, low-M * galaxies ( log 10 ( M * / M ⊙ ) ∼ 9 ) experience a strong H i depletion (∼0.5 dex in log 10 ( M H I / M ⊙ ) ), while massive galaxies ( log 10 ( M * / M ⊙ ) ∼ 11 ) keep their H i mass nearly unchanged. When looking at the star formation activity, highly star-forming galaxies evolve significantly in M H I (f H I, where f H I ≡ M H I/M *) at fixed SFR (sSFR), while at the lowest probed SFR (sSFR) the scaling relations show no evolution. These findings suggest a scenario in which low-M * galaxies have experienced a strong H i depletion during the last ∼5 Gyr, while massive galaxies have undergone a significant H i replenishment through some accretion mechanism, possibly minor mergers. Interestingly, our results are in good agreement with the predictions of the simba simulation. We conclude that this work sets novel important observational constraints on galaxy scaling relations.

MIGHTEE: the nature of the radio-loud AGN population

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press 516:1 (2022) 245-263

Authors:

Ih Whittam, Mj Jarvis, Cl Hale, M Prescott, Lk Morabito, I Heywood, Nj Adams, J Afonso, Fangxia An, Y Ao, Raa Bowler, Jd Collier, Rp Deane, J Delhaize, B Frank, M Glowacki, Pw Hatfield, N Maddox, L Marchetti, Am Matthews, I Prandoni, S Randriamampandry, Z Randriamanakoto, Djb Smith, Ar Taylor, Nl Thomas, M Vaccari

Abstract:

We study the nature of the faint radio source population detected in the MeerKAT International GHz Tiered Extragalactic Exploration (MIGHTEE) Early Science data in the COSMOS field, focusing on the properties of the radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGNs). Using the extensive multiwavelength data available in the field, we are able to classify 88 per cent of the 5223 radio sources in the field with host galaxy identifications as AGNs (35 per cent) or star-forming galaxies (54 per cent). We select a sample of radio-loud AGNs with redshifts out to z ∼ 6 and radio luminosities 1020 < L1.4 GHz/W Hz−1 < 1027 and classify them as high-excitation and low-excitation radio galaxies (HERGs and LERGs). The classification catalogue is released with this work. We find no significant difference in the host galaxy properties of the HERGs and LERGs in our sample. In contrast to previous work, we find that the HERGs and LERGs have very similar Eddington-scaled accretion rates; in particular we identify a population of very slowly accreting AGNs that are formally classified as HERGs at these low radio luminosities, where separating into HERGs and LERGs possibly becomes redundant. We investigate how black hole mass affects jet power, and find that a black hole mass ≳ 107.8 M⊙ is required to power a jet with mechanical power greater than the radiative luminosity of the AGN (Lmech/Lbol > 1). We discuss that both a high black hole mass and black hole spin may be necessary to launch and sustain a dominant radio jet.

A compressed sensing faraday depth reconstruction framework for the MeerKAT MIGHTEE-POL Survey

Proceedings of the 3rd URSI Atlantic and Asia Pacific Radio Science Meeting (AT-AP-RASC 2022) IEEE (2022) 1-4

Authors:

M Carcamo, A Scaife, R Taylor, M Jarvis, M Bowles, S Sekhar, L Heino, J Stil

Abstract:

In this work we present a novel compute framework for reconstructing Faraday depth signals from noisy and incomplete spectro-polarimetric radio datasets. This framework is based on a compressed-sensing approach that addresses a number of outstanding issues in Faraday depth reconstruction in a systematic and scaleable manner. We apply this framework to early-release data from the MeerKAT MIGHTEE polarisation survey.

Looking at the distant universe with the MeerKAT array: discovery of a luminous OH megamaser at z > 0.5

Astrophysical Journal Letters IOP Science 931:1 (2022) L7

Authors:

Marcin Glowacki, Jordan D Collier, Amir Kazemi-Moridani, Bradley Frank, Hayley Roberts, Jeremy Darling, Hans-Rainer Kloeckner, Nathan Adams, Andrew J Baker, Matthew Bershady, Tariq Blecher, Sarah-Louise Blyth, Rebecca Bowler, Barbara Catinella, Laurent Chemin, Steven M Crawford, Catherine Cress, Romeel Dave, Roger Deane, Erwin de Blok, Jacinta Delhaize, Kenneth Duncan, Ed Elson, Sean February, Eric Gawiser, Peter Hatfield, Julia Healy, Patricia Henning, Kelley M Hess, Ian Heywood, Benne W Holwerda, Munira Hoosain, John P Hughes, Zackary L Hutchens, Matt Jarvis, Sheila Kannappan, Neal Katz, Dusan Keres, Marie Korsaga, Renee C Kraan-Korteweg, Philip Lah, Michelle Lochner, Natasha Maddox, Sphesihle Makhathini, Gerhardt R Meurer, Martin Meyer, Danail Obreschkow, Se-Heon Oh, Tom Oosterloo

Abstract:

In the local universe, OH megamasers (OHMs) are detected almost exclusively in infrared-luminous galaxies, with a prevalence that increases with IR luminosity, suggesting that they trace gas-rich galaxy mergers. Given the proximity of the rest frequencies of OH and the hyperfine transition of neutral atomic hydrogen (H i), radio surveys to probe the cosmic evolution of H i in galaxies also offer exciting prospects for exploiting OHMs to probe the cosmic history of gas-rich mergers. Using observations for the Looking At the Distant Universe with the MeerKAT Array (LADUMA) deep H i survey, we report the first untargeted detection of an OHM at z > 0.5, LADUMA J033046.20-275518.1 (nicknamed "Nkalakatha"). The host system, WISEA J033046.26-275518.3, is an infrared-luminous radio galaxy whose optical redshift z ≈ 0.52 confirms the MeerKAT emission-line detection as OH at a redshift z OH = 0.5225 ± 0.0001 rather than H i at lower redshift. The detected spectral line has 18.4σ peak significance, a width of 459 ± 59 km s-1, and an integrated luminosity of (6.31 ± 0.18 [statistical] ± 0.31 [systematic]) × 103 L ⊙, placing it among the most luminous OHMs known. The galaxy's far-infrared luminosity L FIR = (1.576 ±0.013) × 1012 L ⊙ marks it as an ultraluminous infrared galaxy; its ratio of OH and infrared luminosities is similar to those for lower-redshift OHMs. A comparison between optical and OH redshifts offers a slight indication of an OH outflow. This detection represents the first step toward a systematic exploitation of OHMs as a tracer of galaxy growth at high redshifts.

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