Evidence of mutually exclusive outflow forms from a black hole X-ray binary
(2026)
A HyperFlash and 脡CLAT view of the local environment and energetics of the repeating FRB 20240619D
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 546:3 (2026) stag090
Abstract:
Time-variable propagation effects provide a window into the local plasma environments of repeating fast radio burst (FRB) sources. Here we report high-cadence observations of FRB 20240619D, as part of the HyperFlash and 脡CLAT programmes. We observed for 500 h and detected 217 bursts, including 10 bursts with high fluence ( Jy ms) and implied energy. We track burst-to-burst variations in dispersion measure (DM) and rotation measure (RM), from which we constrain the parallel magnetic field strength in the source鈥檚 local environment: mG. Apparent DM variations between sub-bursts in a single bright event are interpreted as coming from plasma lensing or variable emission height. We also identify two distinct scintillation screens along the line of sight, one associated with the Milky Way and the other likely located in the FRB鈥檚 host galaxy or local environment. Together, these (time-variable) propagation effects reveal that FRB 20240619D is embedded in a dense, turbulent and highly magnetised plasma. The source鈥檚 environment is more dynamic than that measured for many other (repeating) FRB sources, but less extreme compared to several repeaters that are associated with a compact, persistent radio source. FRB 20240619D鈥檚 cumulative burst fluence distribution shows a power-law break, with a flat tail at high energies. Along with previous studies, this emphasises a common feature in the burst energy distribution of hyperactive repeaters. Using the break in the burst fluence distribution, we estimate a source redshift of . We discuss FRB 20240619D鈥檚 nature in the context of similar studies of other repeating FRBs.The galaxy鈥揺nvironment connection revealed by constrained simulations
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press 546:3 (2026) stag108
Abstract:
The evolution of galaxies is known to be connected to their position within the large-scale structure and their local environmental density. We investigate the relative importance of these using the underlying dark matter density field extracted from the Constrained Simulations in BORG (CSiBORG) suite of constrained cosmological simulations. We define cosmic web environment through both dark matter densities averaged on a scale up to 16 Mpc , and through cosmic web location identified by applying DisPerSE to the CSiBORG haloes. We correlate these environmental measures with the properties of observed galaxies in large surveys using optical data (from the NASA-Sloan Atlas) and 21-cm radio data (from ALFALFA). We find statistically significant correlations between environment and colour, neutral hydrogen gas () mass fraction, star formation rate, and S茅rsic index. Together, these correlations suggest that bluer, star-forming, rich, and disc-type galaxies tend to reside in lower density areas, further from filaments, while redder, more elliptical galaxies with lower star formation rates tend to be found in higher density areas, closer to filaments. We find analogous trends with the quenching of galaxies, but notably find that the quenching of low-mass galaxies has a greater dependence on environment than the quenching of high-mass galaxies. We find that the relationship between galaxy properties and the environmental density is stronger than that with distance to filament, suggesting that environmental density has a greater impact on the properties of galaxies than their location within the larger-scale cosmic web.The odyssey of the black hole low mass X-ray binary GX339-4: Five years of dense multi-wavelength monitoring
(2026)
Extragalactic planetary nebulae -- tracers of kinematics and stellar populations out to 100 Mpc
(2026)