6 results on '"Michałowski, M.J."'
Search Results
2. Low frequency view of GRB 190114C reveals time varying shock micro-physics
- Author
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Misra, K., Resmi, L., Kann, D.A., Marongiu, M., Moin, A., Klose, S., Bernardi, G., Postigo, A.D.U., Jaiswal, V.K., Schulze, S., Perley, D.A., Ghosh, A., Dimple, D., Kumar, H., Gupta, R., Michałowski, M.J., Martín, S., Cockeram, A., Cherukuri, S.V., Bhalerao, V., Anderson, Gemma, Pandey, S.B., Anupama, G.C., Thöne, C.C., Barway, S., Wieringa, M.H., Fynbo, J.P.U., Habeeb, N., Misra, K., Resmi, L., Kann, D.A., Marongiu, M., Moin, A., Klose, S., Bernardi, G., Postigo, A.D.U., Jaiswal, V.K., Schulze, S., Perley, D.A., Ghosh, A., Dimple, D., Kumar, H., Gupta, R., Michałowski, M.J., Martín, S., Cockeram, A., Cherukuri, S.V., Bhalerao, V., Anderson, Gemma, Pandey, S.B., Anupama, G.C., Thöne, C.C., Barway, S., Wieringa, M.H., Fynbo, J.P.U., and Habeeb, N.
- Abstract
We present radio and optical afterglow observations of the TeV-bright long gamma-ray burst 190114C at a redshift of z = 0.425, which was detected by the Major Atmospheric Gamma Imaging Cherenkov telescope. Our observations with Atacama Large Millimeter/submillitmeter Array, Australia Telescope Compact Array, and upgraded Giant Metre-wave Radio Telescope were obtained by our low frequency observing campaign and range from ∼1 to ∼140 d after the burst and the optical observations were done with three optical telescopes spanning up to ∼25 d after the burst. Long-term radio/mm observations reveal the complex nature of the afterglow, which does not follow the spectral and temporal closure relations expected from the standard afterglow model. We find that the microphysical parameters of the external forward shock, representing the share of shock-created energy in the non-thermal electron population and magnetic field, are evolving with time. The inferred kinetic energy in the blast-wave depends strongly on the assumed ambient medium density profile, with a constant density medium demanding almost an order of magnitude higher energy than in the prompt emission, while a stellar wind-driven medium requires approximately the same amount energy as in prompt emission.
- Published
- 2021
3. Photometry and models of selected main belt asteroids: IX. Introducing interactive service for asteroid models (ISAM)
- Author
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Marciniak, A., Bartczak, P., Santana-Ros, T., Michałowski, T., Borczyk, W., Fagas, M., Hirsch, R., Kamiński, K., Kryszczyńska, A., Kwiatkowski, T., Polińska, M., Sobkowiak, K., Stasik, M., Antonini, P., Behrend, R., Bembrick, C., Bernasconi, L., Colas, F., Coloma, J., Crippa, R., Manzini, F., Esseiva, N., Santacana, G., Wucher, H., Fauvaud, M., Fauvaud, S., Ferreira, Desiree Della Monica, Hein Bertelsen, R.P., Higgins, D., Kajava, J.J.E., Michałowski, J., Michałowski, M.J., Paschke, A., Poncy, R., Roy, R., Starczewski, S., Velichko, F., Zafar, T., Marciniak, A., Bartczak, P., Santana-Ros, T., Michałowski, T., Borczyk, W., Fagas, M., Hirsch, R., Kamiński, K., Kryszczyńska, A., Kwiatkowski, T., Polińska, M., Sobkowiak, K., Stasik, M., Antonini, P., Behrend, R., Bembrick, C., Bernasconi, L., Colas, F., Coloma, J., Crippa, R., Manzini, F., Esseiva, N., Santacana, G., Wucher, H., Fauvaud, M., Fauvaud, S., Ferreira, Desiree Della Monica, Hein Bertelsen, R.P., Higgins, D., Kajava, J.J.E., Michałowski, J., Michałowski, M.J., Paschke, A., Poncy, R., Roy, R., Starczewski, S., Velichko, F., and Zafar, T.
- Abstract
Context. The shapes and spin states of asteroids observed with photometric techniques can be reconstructed using the lightcurve inversion method. The resultant models can then be confirmed or exploited further by other techniques, such as adaptive optics, radar, thermal infrared, stellar occultations, or space probe imaging. Aims. During our ongoing work to increase the set of asteroids with known spin and shape parameters, there appeared a need for displaying the model plane-of-sky orientations for specific epochs to compare models from different techniques. It would also be instructive to be able to track how the complex lightcurves are produced by various asteroid shapes. Methods. Basing our analysis on an extensive photometric observational dataset, we obtained eight asteroid models with the convex lightcurve inversion method. To enable comparison of the photometric models with those from other observing/modelling techniques, we created an on-line service where we allow the inversion models to be orientated interactively. Results. Our sample of objects is quite representative, containing both relatively fast and slow rotators with highly and lowly inclined spin axes. With this work, we increase the sample of asteroid spin and shape models based on disk-integrated photometry to over 200. Three of the shape models obtained here are confirmed by the stellar occultation data; this also allowed independent determinations of their sizes to be made. Conclusions. The ISAM service can be widely exploited for past and future asteroid observations with various, complementary techniques and for asteroid dimension determination. © 2012 ESO.
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- 2012
4. Study of the NGC 2770 interstellar medium through Hα, millimetric and optical polarimetric data of SN 2008D and SN 2007uy
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Gorosabel, J., primary, de Ugarte Postigo, A., additional, Castro-Tirado, A.J., additional, Agudo, I., additional, Jelínek, M., additional, Leon, S., additional, Augusteijn, T., additional, Fynbo, J.P.U., additional, Michałowski, M.J., additional, Xu, D., additional, Ferrero, P., additional, Kann, D.A., additional, LLorente, A., additional, Bremer, M., additional, Winters, J.-M., additional, Thöne, C.C., additional, and Cepa, J., additional
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
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5. Modelling high resolution ALMA observations of strongly lensed highly star forming galaxies detected by Herschel
- Author
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Dye, S., Furlanetto, C., Dunne, L., Eales, S.A., Negrello, M., Nayyeri, H., van der Werf, P.P., Serjeant, S., Farrah, D., Michałowski, M.J., Baes, M., Marchetti, L., Cooray, A., Riechers, D.A., Amvrosiadis, A., Dye, S., Furlanetto, C., Dunne, L., Eales, S.A., Negrello, M., Nayyeri, H., van der Werf, P.P., Serjeant, S., Farrah, D., Michałowski, M.J., Baes, M., Marchetti, L., Cooray, A., Riechers, D.A., and Amvrosiadis, A.
- Abstract
We have modelled ∼0.1 arcsec resolution ALMA imaging of six strong gravitationally lensed galaxies detected by the Herschel Space Observatory. Our modelling recovers mass properties of the lensing galaxies and, by determining magnification factors, intrinsic properties of the lensed sub-millimetre sources. We find that the lensed galaxies all have high ratios of star formation rate to dust mass, consistent with or higher than the mean ratio for high redshift sub-millimetre galaxies and low redshift ultra-luminous infra-red galaxies. Source reconstruction reveals that most galaxies exhibit disturbed morphologies. Both the cleaned image plane data and the directly observed interferometric visibilities have been modelled, enabling comparison of both approaches. In the majority of cases, the recovered lens models are consistent between methods, all six having mass density profiles that are close to isothermal. However, one system with poor signal to noise shows mildly significant differences.
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6. Characterizing elusive, faint dusty star-forming galaxies: a lensed, optically undetected ALMA galaxy at z ~ 3.3
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S. Berta, Emanuele Daddi, Roberto Maiolino, Manuela Magliocchetti, Ricardo Amorín, Michał J. Michałowski, Andrea Grazian, Giulia Rodighiero, Rosa Valiante, Paola Santini, David Elbaz, S. Pilo, Charlotte Mason, Nathan Bourne, L. Pentericci, Marco Castellano, Francesco Calura, E. Merlin, Francesca Pozzi, Adriano Fontana, A. Mignano, Corentin Schreiber, ITA, USA, GBR, FRA, NLD, Santini, P., Castellano, M., Fontana, A., Merlin, E., Maiolino, R., Mason, C., Mignano, A., Pilo, S., Amorin, R., Berta, S., Bourne, N., Calura, F., Daddi, E., Elbaz, D., Grazian, A., Magliocchetti, M., Michałowski, M.J., Pentericci, L., Pozzi, F., Rodighiero, G., Schreiber, C., Valiante, R., Maiolino, Roberto [0000-0002-4985-3819], Amorin Barbieri, Ricardo [0000-0001-5758-1000], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
- Subjects
Galaxies: fundamental parameters ,Stellar mass ,Population ,Galaxies: fundamental parameter ,FOS: Physical sciences ,Astrophysics::Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics ,Astrophysics ,Cosmology: observation ,01 natural sciences ,Submillimeter: galaxie ,0103 physical sciences ,Galaxy formation and evolution ,10. No inequality ,education ,010303 astronomy & astrophysics ,Astrophysics::Galaxy Astrophysics ,Photometric redshift ,Physics ,education.field_of_study ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Star formation ,Cosmology: observations ,Galaxies: high-redshift ,Astrophysics::Instrumentation and Methods for Astrophysics ,Galaxies: evolution ,Astronomy and Astrophysics ,Galaxies: photometry ,Astronomy and Astrophysic ,Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Galaxies ,Galaxy ,Redshift ,Submillimeter: galaxies ,Space and Planetary Science ,Astrophysics of Galaxies (astro-ph.GA) ,Spectral energy distribution - Abstract
We present the serendipitous ALMA detection of a faint submillimeter galaxy (SMG) lensed by a foreground z~1 galaxy. By optimizing the source detection to deblend the system, we accurately build the full spectral energy distribution of the distant galaxy from the I814 band to radio wavelengths. It is extremely red, with a I-K colour larger than 2.5. We estimate a photometric redshift of 3.28 and determine the physical parameters. The distant galaxy turns out to be magnified by the foreground lens by a factor of ~1.5, which implies an intrinsic Ks-band magnitude of ~24.5, a submillimeter flux at 870um of ~2.5 mJy and a SFR of ~150-300Msun/yr, depending on the adopted tracer. These values place our source towards the faint end of the distribution of observed SMGs, and in particular among the still few faint SMGs with a fully characterized spectral energy distribution, which allows us not only to accurately estimate its redshift but also to measure its stellar mass and other physical properties. The galaxy studied in this work is a representative of the population of faint SMGs, of which only few objects are known to date, that are undetected in optical and therefore are not typically accounted for when measuring the cosmic star formation history (SFH). This faint galaxy population thus likely represents an important and missing piece in our understanding of the cosmic SFH. Its observation and characterization is of major importance to achieve a solid picture of galaxy evolution., A&A, in press. Very minor changes to match the printed version
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- 2016
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