THE CLOSELY POSITIONED THREE RADIO TRANSIENTS IN THE NASU 1.4 GHz WIDE-FIELD SURVEY

  • Matsumura N
  • Niinuma K
  • Kuniyoshi M
  • et al.
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Abstract

In 2004, we started the Nasu 1.4 GHz wide-field survey to study the dynamic universe by simultaneously performing the surveillance of the wide-field sky. We have detected six radio transients with flux densities larger than 1 Jy. In this paper, we report the detection of three new radio transients in the drift-scanning observations at delta ~ +41fdg7. Based on their positions in the sky and flux densities, we considered the candidate types of astronomical objects for transients. As a result, it is suggested that the three radio transients could be massive radio flares associated with known extragalactic sources, such as active galactic nuclei, which are usually very faint in X-ray and radio wavelengths. The three transients were found in the sky of 2° × 1°, while nine transients, including the three transients reported in this paper, are distributed at both high and low Galactic latitude. According to the observational results, we suggest that the wide-field survey simultaneously performed would be useful in searching for radio transients to study the dynamic radio sky.

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APA

Matsumura, N., Niinuma, K., Kuniyoshi, M., Takefuji, K., Asuma, K., Daishido, T., … Nakagawa, S. (2009). THE CLOSELY POSITIONED THREE RADIO TRANSIENTS IN THE NASU 1.4 GHz WIDE-FIELD SURVEY. The Astronomical Journal, 138(3), 787–795. https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-6256/138/3/787

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