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91探花
Black Hole

Lensing of space time around a black hole. At 91探花 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.

Dr Ellen Schallig

Postdoctoral Research Assistant

Research theme

  • Astronomy and astrophysics

Sub department

  • Astrophysics

Research groups

  • Astronomical instrumentation
ellen.schallig@physics.ox.ac.uk
  • About
  • Publications

WEAVE imaging spectroscopy of NGC 6720: an iron bar in the Ring

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 546:1 (2026) staf2139

Authors:

R Wesson, JE Drew, MJ Barlow, J Garc铆a-Rojas, R Greimel, D Jones, A Manchado, RAH Morris, A Zijlstra, PJ Storey, JAL Aguerri, SR Berlanas, E Carrasco, GB Dalton, E Gafton, R Garc铆a-Benito, AL Gonz谩lez-Mor谩n, BT G盲nsicke, S Hughes, S Jin, R Raddi, R S谩nchez-Janssen, E Schallig, DJB Smith

Abstract:

We present spatially resolved spectroscopic observations of the planetary nebula NGC 6720, the Ring Nebula, taken during the science verification phase of WEAVE, a new instrument mounted on the William Herschel Telescope on La Palma. We use the instrument鈥檚 Large Integral Field Unit (LIFU) to obtain spectra of the Ring Nebula, covering its entire optically bright inner regions as well as parts of its much fainter outer molecular halo. We report the discovery of emission from [Fe v] and [Fe vi] confined to a narrow 鈥榖ar鈥 extending across the central regions of the nebula. No lines of other elements share this morphology or, at the spectral resolving power used (), the same radial velocity. The extent to which iron in this bar is depleted is presently unclear; comparison with JWST-detected dust continuum emission suggests that some dust grain destruction may be occurring in the region, but there is currently no observational evidence for the 50 km s shock waves or K X-ray emitting gas needed to enable this. Where the bar is located along the line of sight through the nebula, and how it was created, are new puzzles to be solved for this iconic planetary nebula.

The WEAVE-TwiLight-Survey: expanding WEAVE鈥檚 reach to bright and low-surface-density targets with a novel observing mode

RAS Techniques and Instruments 91探花 University Press 4 (2025) rzaf060

Authors:

Thomas Hajnik, Nicholas A Walton, Giuseppe D鈥橝go, Piercarlo Bonifacio, Gavin Dalton, Lilian Dom铆nguez-Palmero, Emanuel Gafton, Mike J Irwin, Sergio Pic贸, David Terrett, Anke Ardern-Arentsen, Rub茅n S谩nchez-Janssen, David S Aguado, J Alfonso L Aguerri, Carlos Allende聽Prieto, Marc Balcells, Chris Benn, Angela Bragaglia, Elisabetta Caffau, Esperanza Carrasco, Ricardo Carrera, Silvano Desidera, Boris T G盲nsicke, Sarah Hughes, Ian Lewis, Ellen Schallig

Abstract:

Current-day multi-object spectroscopic surveys are often limited in their ability to observe bright stars due to their low surface densities, resulting in increased observational overheads and reduced efficiency. Addressing this, we have developed a novel observing mode for WEAVE (William Herschel Telescope Enhanced Area Velocity Explorer) that enables efficient observations of low-surface-density target fields without incurring additional overheads from calibration exposures. As a pilot for the new mode, we introduce the WEAVE-TwiLight-Survey (WTLS), focusing on bright exoplanet-host stars and their immediate surroundings on the sky. High observational efficiency is achieved by superimposing multiple low-target-density fields and allocating the optical fibres in this configuration. We use a heuristic method to define fields relative to a central guide star, which serves as a reference for their superposition. Suitable guide fibres for each merged configuration are selected using a custom algorithm. Test observations have been carried out, demonstrating the feasibility of the new observing mode. We show that merged field configurations can be observed with WEAVE using the proposed method. The approach minimizes calibration times and opens twilight hours to WEAVE鈥檚 operational schedule. WTLS is built upon the new observing mode and sourced from the ESA PLATO long-duration-phase fields. This survey will result in a homogeneous catalogue of 鈭6300 bright stars, including 62 known planet hosts, laying the groundwork for future elemental abundance studies tracing chemical patterns of planetary formation. This new observing mode (WEAVE-Tumble-Less) expands WEAVE鈥檚 capabilities to rarely used on-sky time and low-density field configurations without sacrificing efficiency.

The WEAVE-TwiLight-Survey: Expanding WEAVE's Reach to Bright and Low-Surface-Density Targets with a Novel Observing Mode

(2025)

Authors:

Thomas Hajnik, Nicholas A Walton, Giuseppe D'Ago, Piercarlo Bonifacio, Gavin Dalton, Lilian Dominguez-Palmero, Emanuel Gafton, Mike J Irwin, Sergio Pico, David Terrett, Anke Ardern-Arentsen, Ruben Sanchez-Janssen, David S Aguado, J Alfonso L Aguerri, Carlos Allende Prieto, Marc Balcells, Chris Benn, Angela Bragaglia, Elisabetta Caffau, Esperanza Carrasco, Ricardo Carrera, Silvano Desidera, Boris T Gansicke, Sarah Hughes, Shoko Jin, Ian Lewis, Alireza Molaeinezhad, David NA Murphy, Ellen Schallig, Scott Trager, Antonella Vallenari

WEAVE first light observations: origin and dynamics of the shock front in Stephan鈥檚 Quintet

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 535:3 (2024) 2269-2290

Authors:

Marina I Arnaudova, Soumyadeep Das, Daniel JB Smith, Martin J Hardcastle, Nina Hatch, Scott C Trager, Russell J Smith, AB Drake, JC McGarry, S Shenoy, JP Stott, JH Knapen, KM Hess, KJ Duncan, A Gloudemans, PN Best, R Garc铆a-Benito, R Kondapally, M Balcells, GS Couto, DC Abrams, D Aguado, JAL Aguerri, R Barrena, CR Benn, T Bensby, SR Berlanas, D Bettoni, D Cano-Infantes, R Carrera, PJ Concepci贸n, Gavin B Dalton, G D鈥橝go, K Dee, L Dom铆nguez-Palmero, JE Drew, EL Escott, C Fari帽a, M Fossati, M Fumagalli, E Gafton, FJ Gribbin, S Hughes, A Iovino, S Jin, Ian Lewis, M Longhetti, J M茅ndez-Abreu, A Mercurio

Abstract:

We present a detailed study of the large-scale shock front in Stephan鈥檚 Quintet, a by-product of past and ongoing interactions. Using integral-field spectroscopy from the new William Herschel Telescope Enhanced Area Velocity Explorer (WEAVE), recent 144 MHz observations from the LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey, and archival data from the Very Large Array and JWST, we obtain new measurements of key shock properties and determine its impact on the system. Harnessing the WEAVE large integral field unit鈥檚 field of view (90 脳 78 arcsec2鈦), spectral resolution (R ~ 2500鈦犫仩), and continuous wavelength coverage across the optical band, we perform robust emission-line modelling and dynamically locate the shock within the multiphase intergalactic medium with higher precision than previously possible. The shocking of the cold gas phase is hypersonic, and comparisons with shock models show that it can readily account for the observed emission-line ratios. In contrast, we demonstrate that the shock is relatively weak in the hot plasma visible in X-rays (with Mach number of M ~ 2鈥4), making it inefficient at producing the relativistic particles needed to explain the observed synchrotron emission. Instead, we propose that it has led to an adiabatic compression of the medium, which has increased the radio luminosity 10-fold. Comparison of the Balmer line-derived extinction map with the molecular gas and hot dust observed with JWST suggests that pre-existing dust may have survived the collision, allowing the condensation of H2鈥 a key channel for dissipating the shock energy.

MOSAIC at the ELT: a unique instrument for the largest ground-based telescope

Proceedings Volume 13096, Ground-based and Airborne Instrumentation for Astronomy X Society of Photo-optical Instrumentation Engineers (2024)

Authors:

Roser Pell贸, Mathieu Puech, 脡ric Prieto, Gavin B Dalton, Ian Lewis, Louis Gabarra, Adam Lowe, Ellen Schallig, Jurgen Schmoll, David Terrett, Alec York

Abstract:

MOSAIC is the Multi-Object Spectrograph (MOS) for the 39m Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) of the European Southern Observatory (ESO), with unique capabilities in terms of multiplex, wavelength coverage and spectral resolution. It is a versatile multi-object spectrograph working in both the Visible and NIR domains, designed to cover the largest possible area (鈭40 arcmin2) on the focal plane, and optimized to achieve the best possible signal-to-noise ratio on the faintest sources, from stars in our Galaxy to galaxies at the epoch of the reionization. In this paper we describe the main characteristics of the instrument, including its expected performance in the different observing modes. The status of the project will be briefly presented, together with the positioning of the instrument in the landscape of the ELT instrumentation. We also review the main expected scientific contributions of MOSAIC, focusing on the synergies between this instrument and other major ground-based and space facilities.

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