Person: Drake, Jeremy
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Publication Multi-Wavelength Observations of the Radio Magnetar PSR J1622–4950 and Discovery of its Possibly Associated Supernova Remnant
(IOP Publishing, 2012) Anderson, Gemma E.; Gaensler, B. M.; Slane, Patrick; Rea, Nanda; Kaplan, David L.; Posselt, Bettina; Levin, Lina; Johnston, Simon; Murray, Stephen S.; Brogan, Crystal L.; Bailes, Matthew; Bates, Samuel; Benjamin, Robert A.; Ramesh Bhat, N. D.; Burgay, Marta; Burke-Spolaor, Sarah; Chakrabarty, Deepto; D'Amico, Nichi; Drake, Jeremy; Esposito, Paolo; Grindlay, Jonathan; Hong, Jaesub; Israel, G. L.; Keith, Michael J.; Kramer, Michael; Lazio, T. Joseph W.; Lee, Julia; Mauerhan, Jon C.; Milia, Sabrina; Possenti, Andrea; Stappers, Ben; Steeghs, Danny T. H.We present multi-wavelength observations of the radio magnetar PSR J1622-4950 and its environment. Observations of PSR J1622-4950 with Chandra (in 2007 and 2009) and XMM (in 2011) show that the X-ray flux of PSR J1622-4950 has decreased by a factor of ~50 over 3.7 years, decaying exponentially with a characteristic time of 360 +/- 11 days. This behavior identifies PSR J1622-4950 as a possible addition to the small class of transient magnetars. The X-ray decay likely indicates that PSR J1622-4950 is recovering from an X-ray outburst that occurred earlier in 2007, before the 2007 Chandra observations. Observations with the Australia Telescope Compact Array show strong radio variability, including a possible radio flaring event at least one and a half years after the 2007 X-ray outburst that may be a direct result of this X-ray event. Radio observations with the Molonglo Observatory Synthesis Telescope reveal that PSR J1622-4950 is 8' southeast of a diffuse radio arc, G333.9+0.0, which appears non-thermal in nature and which could possibly be a previously undiscovered supernova remnant. If G333.9+0.0 is a supernova remnant then the estimates of its size and age, combined with the close proximity and reasonable implied velocity of PSR J1622-4950, suggests that these two objects could be physically associated.
Publication Chandra Multiwavelength Project. II. First Results of X‐Ray Source Properties
(IOP Publishing, 2004) Kim, D.‐W.; Wilkes, Belinda; Green, P. J.; Cameron, R. A.; Drake, Jeremy; Evans, Nancy; Freeman, P.; Gaetz, Terrance; Ghosh, H.; Harnden, F. R. Jr.; Karovska, Margarita; Kashyap, Vinay; Maksym, Peter; Ratzlaff, Peter; Schlegel, E. M.; Silverman, J. D.; Tananbaum, Harvey; Viklinin, AlexeyThe Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP) is a wide-area (~14 deg2) survey of serendipitous Chandra X-ray sources, aiming to establish fair statistical samples covering a wide range of characteristics (such as absorbed active galactic nuclei [AGNs] and high-z clusters of galaxies) at flux levels (fX ~ 10-15 to 10-14 ergs s-1 cm-2) intermediate between the Chandra Deep Field surveys and previous missions. We present the first results of X-ray source properties obtained from the initial sample of 62 observations. The data have been uniformly reduced and analyzed with techniques specifically developed for the ChaMP and then validated by visual examination. Utilizing only near-on-axis X-ray-bright sources (to avoid problems caused by incompleteness and the Eddington bias), we derive the log N- log S relation in soft (0.5-2 keV) and hard (2-8 keV) energy bands. The ChaMP data are consistent with previous results of ROSAT, ASCA, and Chandra Deep Field surveys. In particular, our data nicely fill in the flux gap in the hard band between the Chandra Deep Field data and the previous ASCA data. We check whether there is any systematic difference in the source density between cluster and noncluster fields and also search for field-to-field variation, both of which have been previously reported. We found no significant field-to-field cosmic variation in either test within the statistics (~1 σ) across the flux levels included in our sample. In the X-ray color-color plot, most sources fall in the location characterized by photon index = 1.5-2 and NH = a few × 1020 cm2, suggesting that they are typical broadline AGNs. There also exist a considerable number of sources with peculiar X-ray colors (e.g., highly absorbed, very hard, very soft). We confirm a trend that on average the X-ray color hardens as the count rate decreases. Since the hardening is confined to the softest energy band (0.3-0.9 keV), we conclude that it is most likely due to absorption. We cross-correlate the X-ray sources with other catalogs and describe their properties in terms of optical color, X-ray-to-optical luminosity ratio, and X-ray colors.
Publication Chandra Multiwavelength Project. I. First X‐Ray Source Catalog
(IOP Publishing, 2004) Kim, D.‐W.; Cameron, R. A.; Drake, Jeremy; Evans, Nancy; Freeman, P.; Gaetz, Terrance; Ghosh, H.; Green, P. J.; Harnden, F. R. Jr.; Karovska, Margarita; Kashyap, Vinay; Maksym, Peter; Ratzlaff, Peter; Schlegel, E. M.; Silverman, J. D.; Tananbaum, Harvey; Viklinin, Alexey; Wilkes, Belinda; Grimes, J. P.The Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP) is a wide-area (~14 deg2) survey of serendipitous Chandra X-ray sources, aiming to establish fair statistical samples covering a wide range of characteristics (such as absorbed active galactic nuclei, high-z clusters of galaxies) at flux levels (fX ~ 10-15 to 10-14 ergs s-1 cm-2) intermediate between the Chandra deep surveys and previous missions. We present the first ChaMP catalog, which consists of 991 near on-axis, bright X-ray sources obtained from the initial sample of 62 observations. The data have been uniformly reduced and analyzed with techniques specifically developed for the ChaMP and then validated by visual examination. To assess source reliability and positional uncertainty, we perform a series of simulations and also use Chandra data to complement the simulation study. The false source detection rate is found to be as good as or better than expected for a given limiting threshold. On the other hand, the chance of missing a real source is rather complex, depending on the source counts, off-axis distance (or PSF), and background rate. The positional error (95% confidence level) is usually less than 1'' for a bright source, regardless of its off-axis distance, while it can be as large as 4'' for a weak source (~20 counts) at a large off-axis distance (Doff-axis > 8'). We have also developed new methods to find spatially extended or temporary variable sources, and those sources are listed in the catalog.