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The ASKAP Variables and Slow Transients (VAST) pilot survey

Authors :
Gavin Ramsay
Shi Dai
J. Gerry Doyle
John D. Bunton
Bryan Gaensler
Archibald Fox
Vanessa A. Moss
Joshua Pritchard
Stuart D. Ryder
Adam Stewart
Nikhel Gupta
Baerbel Koribalski
Ziteng Wang
Yuanming Wang
Dougal Dobie
Aaron Chippendale
K. Lee-Waddell
James R. Allison
David L. Kaplan
Craig S. Anderson
Lewis Ball
Matthew Whiting
Daniele d’Antonio
Megan L. Jones
Tao An
Shami Chatterjee
J. Marvil
P. Mirtschin
Elaine M. Sadler
R. Bolton
R. Chekkala
Emil Lenc
David McConnell
K. Jeganathan
J. W. Broderick
A. Ng
Douglas C.-J. Bock
George Heald
F. R. Cooray
Douglas B. Hayman
Keith W. Bannister
Michael S. Wheatland
James K. Leung
Elizabeth K. Mahony
Tara Murphy
Andrew O'Brien
Sergio Pintaldi
Martin Bell
Gregory R. Sivakoff
Sarah Pearce
Maxim Voronkov
Chris Phillips
Naomi McClure-Griffiths
Assaf Horesh
Wasim Raja
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2021.

Abstract

The Variables and Slow Transients Survey (VAST) on the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) is designed to detect highly variable and transient radio sources on timescales from 5 s to$\sim\!5$yr. In this paper, we present the survey description, observation strategy and initial results from the VAST Phase I Pilot Survey. This pilot survey consists of$\sim\!162$h of observations conducted at a central frequency of 888 MHz between 2019 August and 2020 August, with a typical rms sensitivity of$0.24\ \mathrm{mJy\ beam}^{-1}$and angular resolution of$12-20$arcseconds. There are 113 fields, each of which was observed for 12 min integration time, with between 5 and 13 repeats, with cadences between 1 day and 8 months. The total area of the pilot survey footprint is 5 131 square degrees, covering six distinct regions of the sky. An initial search of two of these regions, totalling 1 646 square degrees, revealed 28 highly variable and/or transient sources. Seven of these are known pulsars, including the millisecond pulsar J2039–5617. Another seven are stars, four of which have no previously reported radio detection (SCR J0533–4257, LEHPM 2-783, UCAC3 89–412162 and 2MASS J22414436–6119311). Of the remaining 14 sources, two are active galactic nuclei, six are associated with galaxies and the other six have no multi-wavelength counterparts and are yet to be identified.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13233580
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7621ef64064b73c8b16a833c5a42bf40
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017/pasa.2021.44