Jump To Date
View By Semester
View By Series
Add An Event


Center for Astrophysics Research and Technologies Seminar Series Information

 

Events Calendar

Monitoring the Low Frequency Radio Transient Sky with the Long Wavelength Array

Thursday October 29, 2020
2:00 pm


 Presenter:  Savin Shynu Varghese (UNM)
 Series:  Center for Astrophysics Research and Technologies Seminar Series
 Abstract:  Transient searches in radio astronomy have discovered some of the extreme astrophysical phenomena in our universe. Most of the transient searches over the past 70 years have been focused at frequencies higher than 100 MHz leaving the transient sky below 100 MHz unexplored. The Long Wavelength Array (LWA) telescope offers an excellent opportunity to study the transient sky below 100 MHz with its wide field of view, high sensitivity, and faster imaging at shorter timescales. This talk will focus on the recent transient searches carried out using the all-sky imaging capabilities of the LWA stations located in New Mexico (LWA1 & LWA-SV) and the LWA Owens Valley Radio Observatory (LWA-OVRO) located in California. Blind searches of the sky using LWA1 and LWA-SV in the past 2 years detected a new cosmic transient source at 34 MHz with a flux density of 830 Jy and 15 seconds duration. Along with cosmic transients, we also study radio emission from meteors known as meteor radio afterglows (MRAs). The combined observations of MRAs using LWA1 and LWA-SV revealed their isotropic emission nature. Also, a new broadband imager at LWA-SV is used to collect the spectra of MRAs and understand the correlation between spectral parameters and physical properties of MRAs. Finally I will conclude the talk with our recent efforts on using LWA-OVRO to study the small scale emission regions of MRAs through high angular resolution observations.
 Host:  Gregory Taylor
 Location:  Zoom

Disability Notice If you need an auxiliary aid or service to attend any Department of Physics and Astronomy event, please contact the department (phone: 505 277-2616; email: physics@unm.edu) as far in advance as possible to ensure you are accommodated.