Title: The Dynamic Radio Sky SKA Level 0
1The Dynamic Radio SkySKA Level 0
- Joseph Lazio
- James Cordes
Basic research in radio astronomy at the NRL is
supported by the Office of Naval Research.
2What Does The Transient Radio Sky Look Like?
- Classes of Objects
- GRBs (g-ray loud and g-ray quiet)
- Pulsar giant pulses
- Extrasolar planets
- IDV
- UHECRs
- ETI
- Microquasars
- Operational Modes and Design
- Blind searching vs. targeted vs. triggered
- Collecting area
- Frequency range
- Configuration
- Subarrays vs. multibeaming
- RFI mitigation
- Triggers to other wavelengths!
3Radio Transients
- Consider an incoherent synchrotron source.
- Rayleigh-Jeans approximation
- S/? 2kT/?2
- ?2W2 (1/2?k)(SD2/T)
- pulse width or transient duration W
- flux density S
- distance D
- brightness temperature T
- observing frequency ?
4TransientPhase Space
?W dimensionless pulse width, uncertainty-like
relation SD2 pseudo-luminosity ? Large ?, ?t
searches have not been done in the radio.
Unexplored phase space!
from J. Cordes
5The Dynamic Radio Sky
- GRBs
- Detect the first massive stars as they collapse
to form black holes - Complimentary to JWST
- Extragalactic pulsars
- Probe directly the local baryon density
- Unique to SKA (modulo FUSE and Chandra studies)
- Extrasolar planets
- Measure magnetic field and rotation of planets
- Directly applicable to habitability of
terrestrial planets - Complimentary to TPF
- IDV
- Probe innermost regions of AGN, near supermassive
black holes - Transient pulsars
- Newly discovered
- UHECRs
- Search for particles with energies above the
G-Z-K limit - Physics beyond the Standard Model?
- Complimentary to Fermilab and LHC
- ETI
- Transformational discovery!
- Complimentary to TPF
6Crab Pulsar Giant Pulses
Arecibo
- S 160 x Crab Nebula
- 200 kJy
- Detectable to 1.5 Mpc with Arecibo
- Detectable to 7 Mpc with SKA
- Pulses 3x stronger detectable with the SKA at
the Virgo cluster
7Extrasolar Planets
- Emission generated by stellar-wind loading of
planetary magnetospheres. - May be bursty.
- Assume 15 min. integration 4 MHz bandwidth ?
SKA sensitivity is 1 ?Jy. - SKA does not need to rely on bursts.
- Planetary magnetic fields important for
habitability assessments.
8New Astrophysical Sources
- Evaporating black holes (Phinney Taylor)
- Coalescing compact objects (NS-NS, NS-BH)
- Prompt GRB emission (coherent)
- Coherent sources
- LIGO sources
9GCRT J1746-2757
- Discovered serendipitously in VLA observations of
Galactic center - Extremely steep spectrum or rapid fading
- No X-ray counterpart
GCRT J1746-2757
1998 September
(Hyman, Lazio, Kassim 2002)
10The Dynamic Radio SkyBlind Searching Experiment
- A?T needs to be large
- A collecting area
- ? solid angle covered (instantaneous FOV)
- T time per sky position
- Field of View 1 deg2
- Cover one hemisphere in one day at sub-mJy levels
- Requires access to full field of view
instantaneously - Computationally demanding!
- Configuration
- Compact core (? 50 collecting area)
- RFI mitigation
11The Dynamic Radio SkyTargeted Experiments
- Field of View 1 deg2
- Allows nearby galaxies (e.g., M31, M33) to be
observed in one or a few beams - Requires access to full field of view
instantaneously - Computationally demanding!
- Collecting area 0.5SKA
- Extragalactic pulsars
- Extrasolar planets
- Frequency range 0.55 GHz
- 1 GHz for extragalactic pulsars
- 5 GHz for IDV
- ( 10 GHz for SETI)
- Configuration
- Compact core (? 50 collecting area)
- RFI mitigation
12Radio Transient Sources
- Sky Surveys
- The X-and-?-ray skies have been monitored highly
successfully with wide FoV detectors (e.g.
RXTE/ASM, CGRO/BATSE). - Neutrino/gravitational wave detectors are all
sky. - Optical transient surveys (ROTSE, RAPTOR, LSST)
are/will revolutionalize our knowledge of the
optical transient sky and will drive the trend
toward data mining of petabyte databases. - The transient radio sky (e.g. t largely unexplored.
New objects/phenomena are likely to be discovered
as well as extreme cases in predictable classes
of objects.