Giuseppe Cimò
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Featured researches published by Giuseppe Cimò.
The Astronomical Journal | 2005
P. M. McCulloch; S. P. Ellingsen; David L. Jauncey; Steven Carter; Giuseppe Cimò; James E. J. Lovell; Richard Dodson
Interstellar scintillation has been conclusively demonstrated to be the principal cause of the intraday variability (IDV) observed in the centimeter-wavelength emission of many active galactic nuclei. A few sources show large amplitude modulation in their flux density on a timescale of hours. However, the majority of IDV sources exhibit variability on timescales of a day or more. Some sources have been found to show an annual cycle in the pattern of their variability. Such an annual cycle occurs because the relative speeds of the Earth and the interstellar medium change as the Earth orbits the Sun. To search for these annual variations, as well as to follow the source evolution, requires a dedicated instrument; the necessary amounts of observing time are beyond the capability of the National Facility instruments. Here we describe the scientific motivation for and present an outline of the COSMIC (Continuous Single-Dish Monitoring of Intraday Variability at Ceduna) project, which uses the University of Tasmanias 30m diameter radio telescope at Ceduna, which has been monitoring the flux density of a number of the stronger southern scintillators at 6.65 GHz since 2003 March.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018
Tiege P. McCarthy; S. P. Ellingsen; M. A. Voronkov; Giuseppe Cimò
We have used the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) to make the first high-resolution observations of a large sample of class I methanol masers in the 95-GHz (80-71A+) transition. The target sources consist of a statistically complete sample of 6.7-GHz class II methanol masers with an associated 95-GHz class I methanol maser, enabling a detailed study of the relationship between the two methanol maser classes at arcsecond angular resolution. These sources have been previously observed at high resolution in the 36- and 44-GHz transitions, allowing comparison between all three class I maser transitions. In total, 172 95-GHz maser components were detected across the 32 target sources. We find that at high resolution, when considering matched maser components, a 3:1 flux density ratio is observed between the 95- and 44-GHz components, consistent with a number of previous lower angular resolution studies. The 95-GHz maser components appear to be preferentially located closer to the driving sources and this may indicate that this transition is more strongly inverted nearby to background continuum sources. We do not observe an elevated association rate between 95-GHz maser emission and more evolved sources, as indicated by the presence of 12.2-GHz class II masers. We find that in the majority of cases where both class I and class II methanol emission is observed, some component of the class I emission is associated with a likely outflow candidate.
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society | 2018
Silvia Nösel; Richa Sharma; M. Massi; Giuseppe Cimò; M. Chernyakova
LS I +61
Proceedings of 11th European VLBI Network Symposium & Users Meeting — PoS(11th EVN Symposium) | 2016
Giuseppe Cimò; Leonid I. Gurvits; Preeti Kharb; Ger de Bruyn; Jean Pierre Macquart
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Archive | 2004
Giuseppe Cimò; S. P. Ellingsen; Sjb Carter; P. M. McCulloch; Dl Jauncey; Jim Lovell
303 is an X-ray binary with a radio outburst every ~27 days. Previous studies of the stellar system revealed radio microflares superimposed on the large radio outburst. We present here new radio observations of LS I +61
Proceedings of Science | 2008
Hayley Bignall; Giuseppe Cimò; J. Jauncey; Ce Senkbeil; Jim Lovell; S. P. Ellingsen
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Proceedings of Bursts, Pulses and Flickering: wide-field monitoring of the dynamic radio sky — PoS(Dynamic2007) | 2008
Giuseppe Cimò; Cliff Senkbail; Hayley E. Bignall; S. P. Ellingsen; David L. Jauncey
303 at 2.2 GHz with the Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT). Using various timing analysis methods we find significant Quasi-Periodic Oscillations (QPOs) of 55 minutes stable over the duration of 4 days. We also use archival data obtained from the Suzaku satellite at X-ray wavelengths. We report here for the first time significant X-ray QPOs of about 2 hours present over the time span of 21 hours. We compare our results with the previously reported QPO observations and we conclude that the QPOs seem to be associated with the radio outburst, independent of the amplitude of the outburst. Finally, the different QPO time-scales are discussed in the context of magnetic reconnection.
Proceedings of 8th European VLBI Network Symposium — PoS(8thEVN) | 2007
Giuseppe Cimò; S. P. Ellingsen; Cliff Senkbail; P. M. McCulloch; Hayley E. Bignall; Lucyna Kedziora-Chudczer
Scintillation of flat spectrum radio sources provides a unique instrument to study the characteristics of the electron density distribution throughout the interstellar medium as well as to study the microarcsecond structure of compact radio objects. During the course of its extreme activity, the quasar J1819+3845 has been observed with a number of VLBI arrays. The fast variability, up to 600% in less than one hour, has made it very difficult to image the source. The variability has now stopped and we will present scintillation-free VLBI images of J1819+3548 taken with the EVN (2008) and VLBA (2007). We will compare the quiescent phase of J1819+3845 with images of the source during its extreme variability (observed with global and space VLBI). A description of the possible scattering screen and implications for the source internal structure will be presented.
Proceedings of the 8th European VLBI Network Symposium | 2006
Giuseppe Cimò; S. P. Ellingsen; Ce Senkbeil; P. M. McCulloch; Hayley Bignall; Lucyna Kedziora-Chudczer
Archive | 2006
Lucyna Kedziora-Chudczer; Jean-Pierre Macquart; Hayley E. Bignall; Jamie McCallum; Giuseppe Cimò; David L. Jauncey; S. P. Ellingsen; Ce Senkbeil; Roopesh Ojha
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Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation
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