Identifying Transient Hosts in LSST鈥檚 Deep Drilling Fields with Galaxy Catalogs

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 1000:2 (2026) 289

Authors:

JG Weston, DR Young, SJ Smartt, M Nicholl, MJ Jarvis, IH Whittam

Abstract:

The upcoming Vera C. Rubin Observatory Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) will enable astronomers to discover rare and distant astrophysical transients. Host-galaxy association is crucial for selecting the most scientifically interesting transients for follow-up. LSST deep drilling field (DDF) observations will detect distant transients occurring in galaxies below the detection limits of most all-sky catalogs. Here, we investigate the use of preexisting, field-specific catalogs for host identification in the DDFs and a ranking of their usefulness. We have compiled a database of 70 deep catalogs that overlap with the Rubin DDFs and constructed thin catalogs to be homogenized and combined for transient-host matching. A systematic ranking of their utility is discussed and applied based on the inclusion of information such as spectroscopic redshifts and morphological information. Utilizing this data against a Dark Energy Survey sample of supernovae with pre-identified hosts in the XMM-Large Scale Structure and the Extended Chandra Deep Field-South fields, we evaluate different methods for transient-host association in terms of both accuracy and processing speed. We also apply light data-cleaning techniques to identify and remove contaminants within our associations, such as diffraction spikes and blended galaxies where the correct host cannot be determined with confidence. We use a lightweight machine learning approach in the form of extreme gradient boosting to generate confidence scores in our contaminant selections and associated metrics. Finally, we discuss the computational expense of implementation within the LSST transient alert brokers, which will require efficient, fast-paced processing to handle the large stream of survey data.

MIGHTEE: The evolving radio luminosity functions of star-forming galaxies to z 鈭 4.5 and the cosmic history of star formation

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press (OUP) (2026) stag616

Authors:

Nijin J Thykkathu, Matt J Jarvis, Imogen H Whittam, CL Hale, AM Matthews, I Heywood, Eliab Malefahlo, RG Varadaraj, N Stylianou, Chris Pearson, Nick Seymour, Mattia Vaccari

Abstract:

Abstract A key question in extragalactic astronomy is how the star-formation rate density (SFRD) evolves over cosmic time. A powerful way of addressing this question is using radio-continuum observations, where the radio waves are unaffected by dust and are able to reach sufficient resolution to resolve individual galaxies. We present an investigation of the 1.4聽GHz radio luminosity functions (RLFs) of star-forming galaxies (SFGs) and Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) using deep radio continuum observations in the COSMOS and XMM鈥揕SS fields, covering a combined area of 鈭4 deg2. These data enable the most accurate measurement of the evolution in the SFRD from mid-frequency radio continuum observations. We model the total RLF as the sum of evolving SFG and AGN components, negating the need for individual source classification. We find that the SFGs have systematically higher space densities at fixed luminosity than found in previous radio studies, but consistent with more recent studies with MeerKAT. We attribute this to the excellent low-surface brightness sensitivity of MeerKAT. We then determine the evolution of the SFRD. Adopting the far-infrared 鈥 radio correlation results in a significantly higher SFRD at z > 1, compared to combined UV and far-infrared measurements. However, using more recent relations for the correlation between star-formation rate and radio luminosity, based on full spectral energy distribution modelling, can resolve this apparent discrepancy. Thus radio observations provide a powerful method of determining the total SFRD, in the absence of dust-sensitive far-infrared data.

The second H.E.S.S. gamma-ray burst catalogue: 15 years of observations with the H.E.S.S. telescopes

(2026)

Authors:

A Acharyya, F Aharonian, C Arcaro, H Ashkar, M Backes, V Barbosa Martins, R Batzofin, Y Becherini, D Berge, K Bernl枚hr, M B枚ttcher, C Boisson, J Bolmont, J Borowska, F Brun, B Bruno, C Burger-Scheidlin, S Casanova, J Celic, M Cerruti, S Chandra, A Chen, M Chernyakova, JO Chibueze, O Chibueze, T Collins, B Cornejo, G Cotter, J Damascene Mbarubucyeye, ID Davids, J de Assis Scarpin, M de Bony de Lavergne, M de Naurois, E de O帽a Wilhelmi, AG Delgado Giler, J Devin, A Djannati-Ata茂, J Djuvsland, A Dmytriiev, K Egberts, K Egg, J-P Ernenwein, C Esca帽uela Nieves, MD Filipovic, G Fontaine, S Funk, S Gabici, YA Gallant, M Genaro, JF Glicenstein, J Glombitza, M-H Grondin, L Heckmann, B He脽, JA Hinton, W Hofmann, TL Holch, M Holler, D Horns, Z Huang, M Jamrozy, F Jankowsky, I Jaroschewski, D Jimeno Sanchez, I Jung-Richardt, E Kasai, K Kasprzak, K Katarzy艅ski, D Kerszberg, B Kh茅lifi, W Kluzniak, N Komin, K Kosack, D Kostunin, RG Lang, S Lazarevi膰, M Lemoine-Goumard, J-P Lenain, P Liniewicz, A Luashvili, J Mackey, D Malyshev, D Malyshev, V Marandon, M Mayer, A Mehta, A Mikhno, AMW Mitchell, R Moderski, MO Moghadam, L Mohrmann, A Montanari, E Moulin, J Niemiec, P O'Brien, L Olivera-Nieto, S Panny, M Panter, RD Parsons, U Pensec, P Pichard, S Pita, G P眉hlhofer, M Punch, A Quirrenbach, M Regeard, A Reimer, O Reimer, I Reis, H Ren, B Reville, F Rieger, G Rowell, B Rudak, E Ruiz-Velasco, K Sabri, V Sahakian, H Salzmann, DA Sanchez, A Santangelo, M Sasaki, F Sch眉ssler, M Senniappan, JNS Shapopi, W Si Said, H Sol, S Spencer, 艁 Stawarz, S Steinmassl, T Tanaka, AM Taylor, GL Taylor, R Terrier, M Tsirou, T Unbehaun, C van Eldik, M Vecchi, C Venter, J Vink, T Wach, SJ Wagner, A Wierzcholska, M Zacharias, AA Zdziarski, W Zhong, SJ Zhu, A Zech

MIGHTEE-H I: Mass Models and Dark Matter properties

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (2026) stag531

Authors:

Anastasia A Ponomareva, PE Mancera Pi帽a, AA V膬r膬艧teanu, M Glowacki, H Desmond, MJ Jarvis, T Yasin, I Heywood, N Maddox, EAK Adams, M Baes, A Gebek, S Kurapati, M Maksymowicz-Maciata, KA Oman, H Pan, I Prandoni, SHA Rajohnson, I Ruffa, K Spekkens

Abstract:

Measuring galaxy rotation curves is critical for inferring the properties of dark-matter haloes in the Lambda Cold Dark Matter (螞CDM) paradigm. We present H i rotation curves and mass models for 20 galaxies from the MIGHTEE survey. Using extended H i kinematics, we construct resolved mass models that include stellar, gaseous, and dark-matter components. Stellar masses are derived using 3.6 渭m imaging under fixed mass-to-light ratio (蠏* = M/L) assumptions and are complemented, for the first time for a H I-selected sample, by spatially resolved M/L, obtained from multi-wavelength SED fitting. We examine the ratio of baryonic to observed rotation velocity (Vbar/Vobs) at the characteristic radius R2.2. Adopting a fixed 蠏鈰 = 0.5 M鈯/L鈯 yields a clear dependence of V2.2/Vobs on galaxy luminosity, while adopting 蠏鈰 = 0.2 M鈯/L鈯 substantially weakens this trend. In contrast, the resolved M/L analysis preserves the luminosity dependence while modifying the stellar contribution on a galaxy-by-galaxy basis, providing a more accurate representation of the underlying relation. We model the dark-matter haloes using Navarro鈥揊renk鈥揥hite profiles and find that the different assumptions for a fixed a M/L systematically shift galaxies relative to the theoretical stellar-to-halo mass and baryonic-to-halo mass relations, while the spatially varying M/L yields the closest agreement with theoretical benchmarks within 螞CDM. We therefore demonstrate that future investigations of the dark matter properties of galaxies using rotation curves need to account for varying M/L across individual galaxy profiles and between galaxies in order to obtain accurate measurements of the dark matter, and therefore test 螞CDM.

MIGHTEE/COSMOS-3D: The discovery of three spectroscopically confirmed radio-selected star-forming galaxies at z = 4.9-5.6

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 91探花 University Press (OUP) (2026) stag473

Authors:

RG Varadaraj, A Saxena, S Fakiolas, IH Whittam, MJ Jarvis, RA Meyer, CL Hale, K Kakiichi, M Li, JB Champagne, B Jin, ZJ Li, M Shuntov

Abstract:

Abstract Radio observations offer a dust-independent probe of star formation and active galactic nucleus (AGN) activity, but sufficiently deep data are required to access the crossover luminosity between these processes at high redshift (z > 4.5). We present three spectroscopically confirmed high-redshift radio sources (HzRSs) detected at 1.3聽GHz at z = 4.9鈥5.6, with radio luminosities spanning L1.3 GHz 鈮 2鈥$5\times 10^{24} \, \rm W \, Hz^{-1}$. These sources were first identified as high-redshift candidates through spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting of archival Hubble, JWST NIRCam+MIRI, and ground-based photometry, and then spectroscopically confirmed via the H 伪 emission line using wide-field slitless spectroscopy from JWST COSMOS-3D. The star formation rates (SFRs) measured from SED fitting, the H 伪 flux, and the 1.3聽GHz luminosity, span ~100鈥$1800\, \rm M_{\odot } \, yr^{-1}$, demonstrating broad agreement between these SFR tracers. We find that these three sources lie either on or 0.5鈥1.0聽dex above the star-forming main sequence at z = 4鈥6 and have undergone a recent burst of star formation. The sources have extended rest-UV/optical morphologies with no evidence for a dominant point source component, indicating that an AGN is unlikely to dominate their rest-UV and optical emission. Two of the sources have complex, multi-component rest-frame UV/optical morphologies, suggesting that their starbursts may be triggered by merging activity. These HzRSs open up a new window towards probing radio emission powered by star formation alone at z > 4.5, representing a remarkable opportunity to begin tracing star formation, independent of dust, in the early Universe.