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Dive into the research topics where S. ter Veen is active.

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Featured researches published by S. ter Veen.


Journal of Cosmology and Astroparticle Physics | 2014

Polarized radio emission from extensive air showers measured with LOFAR

P. Schellart; S. Buitink; A. Corstanje; J. E. Enriquez; H. Falcke; J.R. Hörandel; M. Krause; A. Nelles; J. P. Rachen; Olaf Scholten; S. ter Veen; Satyendra Thoudam; T. N. G. Trinh

We present LOFAR measurements of radio emission from extensive air showers. We find that this emission is strongly polarized, with a median degree of polarization of nearly 99%, and that the angle between the polarization direction of the electric field and the Lorentz force acting on the particles, depends on the observer location in the shower plane. This can be understood as a superposition of the radially polarized charge-excess emission mechanism, first proposed by Askaryan and the geomagnetic emission mechanism proposed by Kahn and Lerche. We calculate the relative strengths of both contributions, as quantified by the charge-excess fraction, for 163 individual air showers. We find that the measured charge-excess fraction is higher for air showers arriving from closer to the zenith. Furthermore, the measured charge-excess fraction also increases with increasing observer distance from the air shower symmetry axis. The measured values range from (3.3± 1.0)% for very inclined air showers at 25 m to (20.3± 1.3)% for almost vertical showers at 225 m. Both dependencies are in qualitative agreement with theoretical predictions.


Physical Review D | 2014

Method for high precision reconstruction of air shower Xmax using two-dimensional radio intensity profiles

S. Buitink; A. Corstanje; J. E. Enriquez; H. Falcke; J.R. Hörandel; T. Huege; A. Nelles; J. P. Rachen; P. Schellart; Olaf Scholten; S. ter Veen; Satyendra Thoudam; T. N. G. Trinh

The mass composition of cosmic rays contains important clues about their origin. Accurate measurements are needed to resolve longstanding issues such as the transition from Galactic to extra-Galact ...


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2013

Calibrating high-precision Faraday rotation measurements for LOFAR and the next generation of low-frequency radio telescopes

C. Sotomayor-Beltran; C. Sobey; J. W. T. Hessels; G. De Bruyn; A. Noutsos; A. Alexov; J. Anderson; A. Asgekar; I. M. Avruch; R. Beck; M. E. Bell; M. R. Bell; Marinus Jan Bentum; G. Bernardi; Philip Best; L. Bîrzan; A. Bonafede; F. Breitling; J. Broderick; W. N. Brouw; M. Brüggen; B. Ciardi; F. de Gasperin; R.-J. Dettmar; S. Duscha; J. Eislöffel; H. Falcke; R. A. Fallows; R. P. Fender; C. Ferrari

Faraday rotation measurements using the current and next generation of low-frequency radio telescopes will provide a powerful probe of astronomical magnetic fields. However, achieving the full potential of these measurements requires accurate removal of the time-variable ionospheric Faraday rotation contribution. We present ionFR, a code that calculates the amount of ionospheric Faraday rotation for a specific epoch, geographic location, and line-of-sight. ionFR uses a number of publicly available, GPS-derived total electron content maps and the most recent release of the International Geomagnetic Reference Field. We describe applications of this code for the calibration of radio polarimetric observations, and demonstrate the high accuracy of its modeled ionospheric Faraday rotations using LOFAR pulsar observations. These show that we can accurately determine some of the highest-precision pulsar rotation measures ever achieved. Precision rotation measures can be used to monitor rotation measure variations - either intrinsic or due to the changing line-of-sight through the interstellar medium. This calibration is particularly important for nearby sources, where the ionosphere can contribute a significant fraction of the observed rotation measure. We also discuss planned improvements to ionFR, as well as the importance of ionospheric Faraday rotation calibration for the emerging generation of low-frequency radio telescopes, such as the SKA and its pathfinders.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

A LOFAR census of millisecond pulsars

V. I. Kondratiev; J. P. W. Verbiest; J. W. T. Hessels; A. V. Bilous; B. W. Stappers; M. Kramer; E. Keane; A. Noutsos; S. Oslowski; R.P. Breton; T. E. Hassall; A. Alexov; S. Cooper; H. Falcke; Jean-Mattias Grießmeier; A. Karastergiou; M. Kuniyoshi; M. Pilia; C. Sobey; S. ter Veen; J. van Leeuwen; P. Weltevrede; M. E. Bell; John Broderick; S. Corbel; J. Eislöffel; S. Markoff; A. Rowlinson; J. Swinbank; R. A. M. J. Wijers

We report the detection of 48 millisecond pulsars (MSPs) out of 75 observed thus far using the LOFAR in the frequency range 110-188 MHz. We have also detected three MSPs out of nine observed in the frequency range 38-77 MHz. This is the largest sample of MSPs ever observed at these low frequencies, and half of the detected MSPs were observed for the first time at frequencies below 200 MHz. We present the average pulse profiles of the detected MSPs, their effective pulse widths, and flux densities and compare these with higher observing frequencies. The flux-calibrated, multifrequency LOFAR pulse profiles are publicly available via the EPN Database of Pulsar Profiles. We also present average values of dispersion measures (DM) and discuss DM and profile variations. About 35% of the MSPs show strong narrow profiles, another 25% exhibit scattered profiles, and the rest are only weakly detected. A qualitative comparison of LOFAR profiles with those at higher radio frequencies shows constant separation between profile components. Similarly, the profile widths are consistent with those observed at higher frequencies, unless scattering dominates at the lowest frequencies. This is very different from what is observed for normal pulsars and suggests a compact emission region in the MSP magnetosphere. The amplitude ratio of the profile components, on the other hand, can dramatically change towards low frequencies, often with the trailing component becoming dominant. As previously demonstrated this can be caused by aberration and retardation. This data set enables high-precision studies of pulse profile evolution with frequency, dispersion, Faraday rotation, and scattering in the interstellar medium. Characterising and correcting these systematic effects may improve pulsar-timing precision at higher observing frequencies, where pulsar timing array projects aim to directly detect gravitational waves.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

A LOFAR census of non-recycled pulsars: average profiles, dispersion measures, flux densities, and spectra

A. V. Bilous; V. I. Kondratiev; M. Kramer; E. Keane; J. W. T. Hessels; B. W. Stappers; V. Malofeev; C. Sobey; R. P. Breton; S. Cooper; H. Falcke; A. Karastergiou; D. Michilli; S. Oslowski; S. Sanidas; S. ter Veen; J. van Leeuwen; J. P. W. Verbiest; P. Weltevrede; P. Zarka; Jean-Mathias Grießmeier; M. Serylak; M. E. Bell; John Broderick; J. Eislöffel; S. Markoff; A. Rowlinson

We present first results from a LOFAR census of non-recycled pulsars. The census includes almost all such pulsars known (194 sources) at declinations Dec > 8° and Galactic latitudes |Gb| > 3°, regardless of their expected flux densities and scattering times. Each pulsar was observed for ≥20 min in the contiguous frequency range of 110–188 MHz. Full-Stokes data were recorded. We present the dispersion measures, flux densities, and calibrated total intensity profiles for the 158 pulsars detected in the sample. The median uncertainty in census dispersion measures (1.5 × 10-3 pc cm-3) is ten times smaller, on average, than in the ATNF pulsar catalogue. We combined census flux densities with those in the literature and fitted the resulting broadband spectra with single or broken power-law functions. For 48 census pulsars such fits are being published for the first time. Typically, thechoice between single and broken power-laws, as well as the location of the spectral break, were highly influenced by the spectral coverage of the available flux density measurements. In particular, the inclusion of measurements below 100 MHz appears essential for investigating the low-frequency turnover in the spectra for most of the census pulsars. For several pulsars, we compared the spectral indices from different works and found the typical spread of values to be within 0.5–1.5, suggesting a prevailing underestimation of spectral index errors in the literature. The census observations yielded some unexpected individual source results, as we describe in the paper. Lastly, we will provide this unique sample of wide-band, low-frequency pulse profiles via the European Pulsar Network Database.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2015

Calibrating the absolute amplitude scale for air showers measured at LOFAR

A. Nelles; J.R. Hörandel; T. Karskens; M. Krause; S. Buitink; A. Corstanje; J. E. Enriquez; M. Erdmann; H. Falcke; A. Haungs; R. Hiller; T. Huege; R. Krause; K. Link; M. J. Norden; J. P. Rachen; L. Rossetto; P. Schellart; Olaf Scholten; F.G. Schröder; S. ter Veen; Satyendra Thoudam; T. N. G. Trinh; K. Weidenhaupt; Stefan J. Wijnholds; J. Anderson; L. Bähren; M. E. Bell; Marinus Jan Bentum; Philip Best

Air showers induced by cosmic rays create nanosecond pulses detectable at radio frequencies. These pulses have been measured successfully in the past few years at the LOw-Frequency ARray (LOFAR) and are used to study the properties of cosmic rays. For a complete understanding of this phenomenon and the underlying physical processes, an absolute calibration of the detecting antenna system is needed. We present three approaches that were used to check and improve the antenna model of LOFAR and to provide an absolute calibration of the whole system for air shower measurements. Two methods are based on calibrated reference sources and one on a calibration approach using the diffuse radio emission of the Galaxy, optimized for short data-sets. An accuracy of 19% in amplitude is reached. The absolute calibration is also compared to predictions from air shower simulations. These results are used to set an absolute energy scale for air shower measurements and can be used as a basis for an absolute scale for the measurement of astronomical transients with LOFAR.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2015

Pulsar polarisation below 200 MHz: Average profiles and propagation effects

A. Noutsos; C. Sobey; V. I. Kondratiev; P. Weltevrede; J.P.W. Verbiest; A. Karastergiou; M. Kramer; M. Kuniyoshi; A. Alexov; R.P. Breton; A. V. Bilous; S. Cooper; H. Falcke; J.-M. Grießmeier; T. E. Hassall; J. W. T. Hessels; E. Keane; S. Oslowski; M. Pilia; M. Serylak; B. W. Stappers; S. ter Veen; J. van Leeuwen; K. Zagkouris; K. Anderson; L. Bähren; M. E. Bell; John Broderick; D. Carbone; Y. Cendes

We present the highest-quality polarisation profiles to date of 16 non-recycled pulsars and four millisecond pulsars, observed below 200 MHz with the LOFAR high-band antennas. Based on the observed profiles, we perform an initial investigation of expected observational effects resulting from the propagation of polarised emission in the pulsar magnetosphere and the interstellar medium. The predictions of magnetospheric birefringence in pulsars have been tested using spectra of the pulse width and fractional polarisation from multifrequency data. The derived spectra offer only partial support for the expected effects of birefringence on the polarisation properties, with only about half of our sample being consistent with the models predictions. It is noted that for some pulsars these measurements are contaminated by the effects of interstellar scattering. For a number of pulsars in our sample, we have observed significant variations in the amount of Faraday rotation as a function of pulse phase, which is possibly an artefact of scattering. These variations are typically two orders of magnitude smaller than that observed at 1400 MHz by Noutsos et al. (2009), for a different sample of southern pulsars. In this paper we present a possible explanation for the difference in magnitude of this effect between the two frequencies, based on scattering. Finally, we have estimated the magnetospheric emission heights of low-frequency radiation from four pulsars, based on the phase lags between the flux-density and the PA profiles, and the theoretical framework of Blaskiewicz, Cordes & Wasserman (1991). These estimates yielded heights of a few hundred km; at least for PSR B1133+16, this is consistent with emission heights derived based on radius-to-frequency mapping, but is up to a few times larger than the recent upper limit based on pulsar timing.


Physical Review Letters | 2015

Probing atmospheric electric fields in thunderstorms through radio emission from cosmic-ray induced air showers

P. Schellart; T. n. g. Trinh; S. Buitink; A. Corstanje; J. E. Enriquez; H. Falcke; J.R. Hörandel; A. Nelles; J. P. Rachen; L. Rossetto; Olaf Scholten; S. ter Veen; Satyendra Thoudam; Ute Ebert; C. Koehn; Casper Rutjes; A. Alexov; J. Anderson; I. M. Avruch; Marinus Jan Bentum; G. Bernardi; Philip Best; A. Bonafede; F. Breitling; John Broderick; M. Brüggen; H. r. Butcher; B. Ciardi; E. de Geus; M. de Vos

We present measurements of radio emission from cosmic ray air showers that took place during thunderstorms. The intensity and polarization patterns of these air showers are radically different from those measured during fair-weather conditions. With the use of a simple two-layer model for the atmospheric electric field, these patterns can be well reproduced by state-of-the-art simulation codes. This in turn provides a novel way to study atmospheric electric fields.


Astroparticle Physics | 2015

The shape of the radio wavefront of extensive air showers as measured with LOFAR

A. Corstanje; P. Schellart; A. Nelles; S. Buitink; J. E. Enriquez; H. Falcke; W. Frieswijk; J.R. Hörandel; M. Krause; J. P. Rachen; Olaf Scholten; S. ter Veen; Satyendra Thoudam; T. N. G. Trinh; M. van den Akker; A. Alexov; J. Anderson; I. M. Avruch; M. E. Bell; Marinus Jan Bentum; G. Bernardi; Philip Best; A. Bonafede; F. Breitling; J. Broderick; M. Brüggen; H. R. Butcher; B. Ciardi; F. de Gasperin; E. de Geus

Extensive air showers, induced by high energy cosmic rays impinging on the Earths atmosphere, produce radio emission that is measured with the LOFAR radio telescope. As the emission comes from a finite distance of a few kilometers, the incident wavefront is non-planar. A spherical, conical or hyperbolic shape of the wavefront has been proposed, but measurements of individual air showers have been inconclusive so far. For a selected high-quality sample of 161 measured extensive air showers, we have reconstructed the wavefront by measuring pulse arrival times to sub-nanosecond precision in 200 to 350 individual antennas. For each measured air shower, we have fitted a conical, spherical, and hyperboloid shape to the arrival times. The fit quality and a likelihood analysis show that a hyperboloid is the best parametrization. Using a non-planar wavefront shape gives an improved angular resolution, when reconstructing the shower arrival direction. Furthermore, a dependence of the wavefront shape on the shower geometry can be seen. This suggests that it will be possible to use a wavefront shape analysis to get an additional handle on the atmospheric depth of the shower maximum, which is sensitive to the mass of the primary particle.


Astronomy and Astrophysics | 2016

Wide-Band, Low-Frequency Pulse Profiles of 100 Radio Pulsars with LOFAR

M. Pilia; J. W. T. Hessels; B. W. Stappers; V. I. Kondratiev; M. Kramer; J. van Leeuwen; P. Weltevrede; A. G. Lyne; K. Zagkouris; T. E. Hassall; A. V. Bilous; R.P. Breton; H. Falcke; Jean-Mathias Grießmeier; E. Keane; A. Karastergiou; M. Kuniyoshi; A. Noutsos; S. Oslowski; M. Serylak; C. Sobey; S. ter Veen; A. Alexov; J. Anderson; A. Asgekar; I. M. Avruch; M. E. Bell; Marinus Jan Bentum; G. Bernardi; L. Bîrzan

Context. LOFAR offers the unique capability of observing pulsars across the 10−240 MHz frequency range with a fractional bandwidth of roughly 50%. This spectral range is well suited for studying the frequency evolution of pulse profile morphology caused by both intrinsic and extrinsic effects such as changing emission altitude in the pulsar magnetosphere or scatter broadening by the interstellar medium, respectively. Aims. The magnitude of most of these effects increases rapidly towards low frequencies. LOFAR can thus address a number of open questions about the nature of radio pulsar emission and its propagation through the interstellar medium. Methods. We present the average pulse profiles of 100 pulsars observed in the two LOFAR frequency bands: high band (120–167 MHz, 100 profiles) and low band (15–62 MHz, 26 profiles). We compare them with Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT) and Lovell Telescope observations at higher frequencies (350 and 1400 MHz) to study the profile evolution. The profiles were aligned in absolute phase by folding with a new set of timing solutions from the Lovell Telescope, which we present along with precise dispersion measures obtained with LOFAR. Results. We find that the profile evolution with decreasing radio frequency does not follow a specific trend; depending on the geometry of the pulsar, new components can enter into or be hidden from view. Nonetheless, in general our observations confirm the widening of pulsar profiles at low frequencies, as expected from radius-to-frequency mapping or birefringence theories.

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H. Falcke

Radboud University Nijmegen

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J.R. Hörandel

Radboud University Nijmegen

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P. Schellart

Radboud University Nijmegen

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A. Corstanje

Radboud University Nijmegen

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Satyendra Thoudam

Radboud University Nijmegen

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A. Nelles

University of California

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J. P. Rachen

Radboud University Nijmegen

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S. Buitink

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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