SIMBAD references

2017MNRAS.469.1299T - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 469, 1299-1313 (2017/August-1)

The fading of Cassiopeia A, and improved models for the absolute spectrum of primary radio calibration sources.

TROTTER A.S., REICHART D.E., EGGER R.E., STYBLOVA J., PAGGEN M.L., MARTIN J.R., DUTTON D.A., REICHART J.E., KUMAR N.D., MAPLES M.P., BARLOW B.N., BERGER T.A., FOSTER A.C., FRANK N.R., GHIGO F.D., HAISLIP J.B., HEATHERLY S.A., KOUPRIANOV V.V., LACLUYZE A.P., MOFFETT D.A., MOORE J.P., STANLEY J.L. and WHITE S.

Abstract (from CDS):

Based on 5 yr of observations with the 40-foot telescope at Green Bank Observatory (GBO), Reichart & Stephens found that the radio source Cassiopeia A had either faded more slowly between the mid-1970s and late 1990s than Baars et al. had found it to be fading between the late 1940s and mid-1970s, or that it had rebrightened and then resumed fading sometime between the mid-1970s and mid-1990s, in the L band (1.4 GHz). Here, we present 15 additional years of observations of Cas A and Cyg A with the 40-foot in the L band, and three and a half additional years of observations of Cas A, Cyg A, Tau A and Vir A with GBO's recently refurbished 20-m telescope in the L and X (9 GHz) bands. We also present a more sophisticated analysis of the 40-foot data, and a reanalysis of the Baars et al. data, which reveals small, but non-negligible differences. We find that overall, between the late 1950s and late 2010s, Cas A faded at an average rate of 0.670 ± 0.019 per cent yr–1 in the L band, consistent with Reichart & Stephens. However, we also find, at the 6.3σ credible level, that it did not fade at a constant rate. Rather, Cas A faded at a faster rate through at least the late 1960s, rebrightened (or at least faded at a much slower rate), and then resumed fading at a similarly fast rate by, at most, the late 1990s. Given these differences from the original Baars et al. analysis, and given the importance of their fitted spectral and temporal models for flux-density calibration in radio astronomy, we update and improve on these models for all four of these radio sources. In doing so, we additionally find that Tau A is fading at a rate of 0.102+0.042–0.043 per cent yr–1 in the L band.

Abstract Copyright: © 2017 The Authors Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): ISM: individual objects: Cassiopeia A - ISM: individual objects: Taurus A - galaxies: individual: Cygnus A - galaxies: individual: Virgo A - radio continuum: general - radio continuum: general

Simbad objects: 4

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