A Compressed Sensing Faraday Depth Reconstruction Framework for the MeerKAT MIGHTEE-POL Survey

ArXiv 2206.03283 (2022)

Authors:

Miguel Cárcamo, Anna Scaife, Russ Taylor, Matt Jarvis, Micah Bowles, Srikrishna Sekhar, Lennart Heino, Jeroen Stil

Radio Galaxy Zoo: Using semi-supervised learning to leverage large unlabelled data-sets for radio galaxy classification under data-set shift

ArXiv 2204.08816 (2022)

Authors:

Inigo V Slijepcevic, Anna MM Scaife, Mike Walmsley, Micah Bowles, Ivy Wong, Stanislav S Shabala, Hongming Tang

Serendipitous discovery of radio flaring behaviour from a nearby M dwarf with MeerKAT

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91̽»¨ University Press 513:3 (2022) 3482-3492

Authors:

Alex Andersson, Rob Fender, Chris Lintott, David Williams, Laura Driessen, Patrick Woudt, Alexander van der Horst, David Buckley, Sara Motta, Lauren Rhodes, Nora Eisner, Rachel Osten, Paul Vreeswijk, Steven Bloemen, Paul Groot

Abstract:

We report on the detection of MKT J174641.0−321404, a new radio transient found in untargeted searches of wide-field MeerKAT radio images centred on the black hole X-ray binary H1743−322. MKT J174641.0−321404 is highly variable at 1.3 GHz and was detected three times during 11 observations of the field in late 2018, reaching a maximum flux density of 590 ± 60 μJy. We associate this radio transient with a high proper motion, M dwarf star SCR 1746−3214 12 pc away from the Sun. Multiwavelength observations of this M dwarf indicate flaring activity across the electromagnetic spectrum, consistent with emission expected from dMe stars, and providing upper limits on quiescent brightness in both the radio and X-ray regimes. TESS photometry reveals a rotational period for SCR 1746−3214 of 0.2292 ± 0.0025 days, which at its estimated radius makes the star a rapid rotator, comparable to other low mass systems. Dedicated spectroscopic follow up confirms the star as a mid-late spectral M dwarf with clear magnetic activity indicated by strong Hα emission. This transient’s serendipitous discovery by MeerKAT, along with multiwavelength characterisation, make it a prime demonstration of both the capabilities of the current generation of radio interferometers and the value of simultaneous observations by optical facilities such as MeerLICHT. Our results build upon the literature of of M dwarfs’ flaring behaviour, particularly relevant to the habitability of their planetary systems.

Serendipitous discovery of radio flaring behaviour from a nearby M dwarf with MeerKAT

(2022)

Authors:

Alex Andersson, Rob Fender, Chris Lintott, David Williams, Laura Driessen, Patrick Woudt, Alexander van der Horst, David Buckley, Sara Motta, Lauren Rhodes, Nora Eisner, Rachel Osten, Paul Vreeswijk, Steven Bloemen, Paul Groot

Search and identification of transient and variable radio sources using MeerKAT observations: a case study on the MAXI J1820+070 field

(2022)

Authors:

A Rowlinson, J Meijn, J Bright, AJ van der Horst, S Chastain, S Fijma, R Fender, I Heywood, RAMJ Wijers, PA Woudt, A Andersson, GR Sivakoff, E Tremou, LN Driessen