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91探花
sky and dish

Aris Karastergiou

Professor of Astrophysics and Fellow at St Edmund Hall

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • MeerKAT
  • Pulsars, transients and relativistic astrophysics
  • The Square Kilometre Array (SKA)
  • Gamma-ray astronomy
Aris.Karastergiou@physics.ox.ac.uk
Telephone: 01865 (2)73642
Denys Wilkinson Building, room 603C
  • About
  • Publications

Evaluating the effectiveness of radio frequency interference removal algorithms for single pulse searches

RAS Techniques and Instruments 91探花 University Press 5 (2026) rzag004

Authors:

RS Hombal, L Levin, BW Stappers, M Droog, A Karastergiou, D Lumbaa, MB Mickaliger, A Naidu, KM Rajwade, J Sepulveda, B Shaw, S Singh, T Prabu

Abstract:

Radio frequency interference (RFI), the presence of artificial and/or terrestrial signals in astronomical data, poses a great challenge to the search for pulsars and radio transients, such as rotating radio transients (RRATs) and fast radio bursts (FRBs), by obscuring or distorting the signal of interest and resulting in large numbers of erroneous detections. RFI mitigation algorithms aim to remove this interference and improve the chance of detection of transients, but with the growing number of techniques, selecting the most appropriate method for a given survey can be problematic. The choice of method is particularly important in real-time searches planned for next-generation telescopes such as those of the SKAO, where there is no possibility to reprocess the data. In this paper, we explore the algorithm selection problem by injecting pulses into data which simulates several RFI environments. A set of these files is then cleaned using RFI mitigation algorithms and run through a single pulse search pipeline to analyse the recovery of the injected pulses. We examine the recovery of the injected single pulses with an emphasis on a number of cases spanning a range of pulse brightness, width, and dispersion measure. The efficacy and side effects of a few popular RFI excision methods, namely IQRM, SKF, and ZDMF are evaluated.

Pulsar Science with the SKA Observatory

The Open Journal of Astrophysics Maynooth University 8 Supplement:1 (2025)

Authors:

Bhal Chandra Joshi, Aris Karastergiou, Marta Burgay

Abstract:

The large instantaneous sensitivity, a wide frequency coverage and flexible observation modes with large number of beams in the sky are the main features of the SKA observatory鈥檚 two telescopes, the SKA-Low and the SKA-Mid, which are located on two different continents. Owing to these capabilities, the SKAO telescopes are going to be a game-changer for radio astronomy in general and pulsar astronomy in particular. The eleven articles in this special issue on pulsar science with the SKA Observatory describe its impact on different areas of pulsar science. In this lead article, a brief description of the two telescopes highlighting the relevant features for pulsar science is presented followed by an overview of each accompanying article, exploring the inter-relationship between different pulsar science use cases.

Understanding pulsar magnetospheres with the SKAO

The Open Journal of Astrophysics Maynooth University 8 Supplement:1 (2025)

Authors:

Lucy S Oswald, Avishek Basu, Manoneeta Chakraborty, Bhal Chandra Joshi, Natalia Lewandowska, Kuo Liu, Marcus Lower, Alexander Phillipov, Xiaoxi Song, Pratik Tarafdar, Joeri van Leeuwen, Anna Watts, Patrick Weltevrede, Geoff Wright, Jan Benacek, Aru Beri, Shunshun Cao, Paolo Esposito, Fabian Jankowski, Jinchen Jiang, Aris Karastergiou, Kejia Lee, Nanda Rea, Dany Vohl

Abstract:

The SKA telescopes will bring unparalleled sensitivity across a broad radio band, a wide field of view across the Southern sky, and the capacity for sub-arraying, all of which make it the ideal instrument for studying the pulsar magnetosphere. This paper describes the advances that have been made in pulsar magnetosphere physics over the last decade, and details how these have been made possible through the advances of modern radio telescopes, particularly SKA precursors and pathfinders. It explains how the SKA telescopes would transform the field of pulsar magnetosphere physics through a combination of large-scale monitoring surveys and in-depth follow-up observations of unique sources and new discoveries. Finally, it describes how the specific observing opportunities available with the AA* and AA4 configurations will achieve the advances necessary to solve the problem of pulsar radio emission physics in the coming years.

Are FRBs emitted from rotating magnetospheres? Searching for periodicity in polarized bursts

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society: Letters 91探花 University Press 542:1 (2025) L43-L47

Authors:

KM Rajwade, A Karastergiou

Abstract:

One of the potential sources of repeating fast radio bursts (FRBs) is a rotating magnetosphere of a compact object, as suggested by the similarities in the polarization properties of FRBs and radio pulsars. Attempts to measure an underlying period in the times of arrival of repeating FRBs have nevertheless been unsuccessful. To explain this lack of observed periodicity, it is often suggested that the line of sight towards the source must be sampling active parts of the emitting magnetosphere throughout the rotation of the compact object, i.e. has a large duty cycle, as can be the case in a neutron star with near-aligned magnetic and rotation axes. This may lead to apparently aperiodic bursts; however, the polarization angle of the bursts should be tied to the rotational phase from which they occur. This is true for radio pulsars. We therefore propose a new test to identify a possible stable rotation period under the assumptions above, based on a periodogram of the measured polarization angle time series for repeating FRBs. We show that this test is highly sensitive when the duty cycle is large, where standard time-of-arrival periodicity searches fail. Therefore, we can directly test the hypothesis of repeating FRBs of magnetospheric origin with a stable rotation period. Both positive and negative results of the test applied to FRB data will provide important information.

The Thousand-Pulsar-Array programme on MeerKAT鈥揦VI. Mapping the Galactic magnetic field with pulsar observations

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 540:3 (2025) 2112-2130

Authors:

LS Oswald, P Weltevrede, B Posselt, S Johnston, A Karastergiou, ME Lower

Abstract:

Measuring the magnetic field of the Milky Way reveals the structure and evolution of the Galaxy. Pulsar rotation measures (RMs) provide a means to probe this Galactic magnetic field (GMF) in three dimensions. We use the largest single-origin data set of pulsar measurements, from the MeerKAT Thousand-Pulsar-Array, to map out GMF components parallel to pulsar lines of sight. We also present these measurements for easy integration into the consolidated RM catalogue, RMTable. Focusing on the Galactic disc, we investigate competing theories of how the GMF relates to the spiral arms, comparing our observational map with five analytic models of magnetic field structure. We also analyse RMs to extragalactic radio sources, to help build-up a three-dimensional picture of the magnetic structure of the Galaxy. In particular, our large number of measurements allows us to investigate differing magnetic field behaviour in the upper and lower halves of the Galactic plane. We find that the GMF is best explained as following the spiral arms in a roughly bisymmetric structure, with antisymmetric parity with respect to the Galactic plane. This picture is complicated by variations in parity on different spiral arms, and the parity change location appears to be shifted by a distance of 0.15 kpc perpendicular to the Galactic plane. This indicates a complex relationship between the large-scale distributions of matter and magnetic fields in our Galaxy. Future pulsar discoveries will help reveal the origins of this relationship with greater precision, as well as probing the locations of local magnetic field inhomogenities.

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