Southern Hemisphere Seti Survey: Five Years of Project Meta II

1997 ◽  
Vol 161 ◽  
pp. 611-621
Author(s):  
Guillermo A. Lemarchand ◽  
Fernando R. Colomb ◽  
E. Eduardo Hurrell ◽  
Juan Carlos Olalde

AbstractProject META II, a full sky survey for artificial narrow-band signals, has been conducted from one of the two 30-m radiotelescopes of the Instituto Argentino de Radioastronomía (IAR). The search was performed near the 1420 Mhz line of neutral hydrogen, using a 8.4 million channels Fourier spectrometer of 0.05 Hz resolution and 400 kHz instantaneous bandwidth. The observing frequency was corrected both for motions with respect to three astronomical inertial frames, and for the effect of Earths rotation, which provides a characteristic changing signature for narrow-band signals of extraterrestrial origin. Among the 2 × 1013spectral channels analyzed, 29 extra-statistical narrow-band events were found, exceeding the average threshold of 1.7 × 10−23Wm−2. The strongest signals that survive culling for terrestrial interference lie in or near the galactic plane. A description of the project META II observing scheme and results is made as well as the possible interpretation of the results using the Cordes-Lazio-Sagan model based in interstellar scattering theory.

1967 ◽  
Vol 31 ◽  
pp. 239-251 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. J. Kerr

A review is given of information on the galactic-centre region obtained from recent observations of the 21-cm line from neutral hydrogen, the 18-cm group of OH lines, a hydrogen recombination line at 6 cm wavelength, and the continuum emission from ionized hydrogen.Both inward and outward motions are important in this region, in addition to rotation. Several types of observation indicate the presence of material in features inclined to the galactic plane. The relationship between the H and OH concentrations is not yet clear, but a rough picture of the central region can be proposed.


1981 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 247-250 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. N. R. Taylor ◽  
R. Llewellyn ◽  
P. Payne ◽  
R. A. Vaile ◽  
S. Sakellis

Coronae Austrinae is one of the few star formation areas lying well away from the galactic plane (l = 360°, b = −17°) and is visible predominantly from the Southern Hemisphere.


1977 ◽  
Vol 74 ◽  
pp. 85-97 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. G. Bolton

Surveys of the sky between declinations +25° and −90° at 2700 MHz (11 cm) have been in progress for the past 10 years. Excluding some regions close to the galactic plane the whole sky south of +25° has been surveyed to a flux density limit of 0.6 Jy at 2700 MHz and within this area surveys to limits of 0.35, 0.25 or 0.1 Jy have been made covering 3.5 sr. Flux densities have been measured at 5000 MHz for all sources stronger than 0.35 Jy at 2700 MHz. The source positions have an average accuracy of 10″ arc in both coordinates and the positions have been examined for optical identifications on Palomar, ESO or SRC sky survey plates, which now cover 95% of the area. The first part of this paper concerns the relationships between the spectral indices α(2700 to 5000 MHz) and the identifications of the 2300 sources with galactic latitudes greater than 10°. It is a statistically significant sample, since the sources stronger than 0.35 Jy cover 3.5 sr. It is also a representative sample, since no selection was made on the basis of spectral index or identification. It cannot however be claimed as a complete sample, for two reasons. A substantial fraction of sources found in radio surveys at high frequencies are variable - variations of up to a factor of three can occur on a time scale of a year - thus the various sections of the survey are complete only for the relevant epoch. Many of their optical counterparts are also variables - variations of up to a factor of 100 can occur on a time scale of one year. It is hoped to make some assessment of the effect of these two factors in the next two years, when second-epoch Parkes surveys will begin and SRC Schmidt plates will overlap the Palomar Sky Survey.


1984 ◽  
Vol 81 ◽  
pp. 204-210
Author(s):  
George W. Clark

Comparison of the SAS-3 soft X-ray sky survey (F. Marshall and G. Clark 1984) with the 21-cm neutral hydrogen survey of Stark et al. (1984) confirms the well-known anticorrelation between the counting rates in the C-band (0.10-0.28 keV) and the column density of neutral hydrogen, and demonstrates that this anticorrelation is significant on all angular scales ranging from that of the general trend from the galactic equator to the poles down to the angular resolution of the detector (2°.7 FWHM). Included in this general anticorrelation are numerous instances of what appear to be soft X-ray “shadows” of nearby (100-300 pc) 21-cm features, and several bright X-ray regions coincident with “holes” in the ISM.


1998 ◽  
Vol 179 ◽  
pp. 179-181
Author(s):  
Q.A. Parker ◽  
S. Phillipps

We describe a major new Anglo-Australian proposal for a U.K. Schmidt Telescope (UKST) Hα survey of the Southern Galactic plane, Magellanic clouds and selected regions. The agreed survey will use a new 12 × 12 inch monolithic Hα interference filter of very high specification in combination with Tech Pan film. Tech Pan offers significant advantages for this work due to an inherent sensitivity at Hα and its extremely fine grain, high resolution, exceptional DQE, excellent imaging and low noise (e.g., Parker et al. 1994). The combination of Tech Pan and a narrow band Hα filter will provide a survey of unprecendented area coverage, depth and resolution, superior to any previous optical survey of ionized gas in the galaxy. It should to lead to exciting new discoveries and avenues of research.


1999 ◽  
Vol 171 ◽  
pp. 204-206
Author(s):  
Virginia Kilborn ◽  
Erwin de Blok ◽  
Lister Staveley-Smith ◽  
Rachel Webster

AbstractThe low surface brightness galaxy HIPASS1126-72 was detected in the HI Parkes All Sky Survey (HIPASS). The galaxy was previously listed in the Southern Galaxy Catalogue under the name SGC1124.87221. This galaxy represents a class of galaxies that we will readily detect in the HIPASS survey, which have low surface brightness in the optical, but are easily detectable in neutral hydrogen.


2001 ◽  
Vol 182 ◽  
pp. 32-38
Author(s):  
R.N. Manchester

AbstractThe Parkes multibeam pulsar survey is a major survey for pulsars lying within a 10°-wide strip along the southern Galactic plane, using the multibeam receiver on the Parkes 64-m radiotelescope. It is an international collaboration between groups at Jodrell Bank Observatory, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Bologna Astronomical Observatory and the ATNF. The survey commenced in 1997 August, and has so far succeeded in finding more than 550 previously unknown pulsars. Many of these are distant, with some beyond the centre of the Galaxy according to current models of the interstellar electron density distribution. Interstellar scattering affects the pulse profile of many of the more distant pulsars even at 1374 MHz, the centre frequency of the survey. Preliminary results from the survey are presented.


1959 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 390-397 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. C. Erickson ◽  
H. L. Helfer ◽  
H. E. Tatel

Approximately 1000 observations of neutral hydrogen have been obtained with the 54-channel H-line receiver and the Würzburg antenna of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. H-line profiles have been observed at 10-degree intervals along the ±20-, ±30-, and ± 40-degree parallels of galactic latitude; at 20-degree intervals along the ± 50- and ±60-degree parallels; at 40-degree intervals along the ±70- and ±80-degree parallels and at the poles. Approximately two dozen observations have been taken at points near the galactic plane in order to correlate these observations with the Leiden survey [1]. The beamwidth of the Würzburg antenna was about 2 degrees. The observations were taken in two series, one series during the summer of 1957, and the other series during 1958 January. The video frequency bandwidth of the receiver is 12 kc/s. The profiles consist of averages of from two to six scans with integration times from 4.8 to 7.5 minutes.


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