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31 May 2021 Partner Release

With the findings detailed in two Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society papers, a group of astronomers, led by the Italian National Institute of Astrophysics (INAF) and Macquarie University, reported the first radio observations toward the Galactic Plane using the ASKAP radio telescope, developed and managed by CSIRO. The region mapped by the researchers includes the entire area of the Stellar Continuum Originating from Radio Physics In Our galaxy (SCORPIO) survey, one of the exploration projects of the Evolutionary Map of the Universe (EMU) program, which will use the new ASKAP telescope to make a census of radio sources of the whole southern hemisphere.

As part of the preliminary activities for the EMU project, radio astronomers pointed the ASKAP's antennas in the direction of the Scorpion's tail. At the time observations were carried out, the interferometer wasn’t yet fully deployed (15 of the 36 antennas were then operational), and these were used to image an area of about 40 square degrees. The so-called SCORPIO field was included among the first scientific targets of ASKAP, thanks to preliminary work conducted by the Italian team using the Australia Telescope Compact Array. The team was able to measure more than 3600 compact radio sources in the SCORPIO field, many of which are unclassified, as well as detecting all the previous sources classified as HII regions or planetary nebulae. Thanks to ASKAP, it is now possible to reveal many sources once referred to as radio-quiet and discover numerous extended, unclassified sources belonging to the class of "galactic bubbles” constituting a new sample for identifying supernova remnants.

Grazia Umana, the principal investigator of the SCORPIO survey and first author of one of the two articles, as well as a researcher at INAF, explains: "SCORPIO is the only galactic field observed so far with ASKAP. It is especially important for the characterisation of these galactic populations because they provide a solid foundation to help design some aspects of the EMU survey. In addition to discovering numerous galactic radio sources, these observations have highlighted the unique feature of ASKAP to map complex objects at a range of angular scales, critical in studying the Galactic Plane.”

The Galactic Plane is the place in the Milky Way where the Solar System resides: it contains countless stars, dust, and gas clouds, as well as a significant amount of dark matter. Studying the equator of the Milky Way has always been one of the essential objectives for radio astronomers. Still, the diffuse emission in the Galaxy makes it challenging to obtain artifact-free images: this effectively reduces the quality of the final pictures making data analysis a challenging task.

Simone Riggi, a researcher at INAF and first author of the survey catalogue article, says: "During the data processing phase, difficulties arose because standard techniques are currently optimised for extragalactic fields where diffuse emission isn’t predominant. It was necessary to develop new calibration procedures and define new strategies in the data acquisition phase. What we have learned will allow us to contribute to the design of the main EMU survey, optimising its scientific return for galactic science."

The EMU project extends into the northern hemisphere, covering 75% of the sky at frequencies around 1 GHz. The researchers will observe a significant fraction of the Galactic Plane to produce a wide-field atlas of the Milky Way's radio emission, with unprecedented results in terms of sensitivity and angular resolution, which will have a significant impact for studying Galactic structure and stellar evolution.

The leader of the EMU project, Andrew Hopkins of Macquarie University, explains: “Even data taken at that early stage in the commissioning of ASKAP demonstrates its excellent sensitivity to extended radio emission. This is critical in enabling the detection of these important structures in the Milky Way, enabling new insights into the formation and evolution of its stars.”

"New ASKAP observations of the Galactic Plane as part of the EMU survey, and later with the SKA project, will allow us to explore a whole series of astrophysical processes, with a very high probability of discovering new classes of objects. Our ultimate goal is to develop and consolidate our observational skills for the upcoming SKA project to be ready and competitive to lead and participate in SKA Key Science Projects and to exploit its data fully,” Grazia Umana concludes.

This article originally appeared on Macquarie University's news page for the Faculty of Science and Engineering.

Read the papers: 

ASKAP is owned and operated by CSIRO, Australia’s national science agency, as a national research facility. We acknowledge the Wajarri Yamatji people as the traditional owners of the Murchison Radio-astronomy Observatory, where ASKAP is located.

Images

The ASKAP telescope.
ASKAP captured many interesting features of the Galactic Plane, including bubble-like supernova remnants. ©  INAF/Macquarie University/EMU
A composite image of a section of the Galactic Plane. The colours denote the information collected from different telescopes: green from Spitzer/Glimpse, red from Herschel/Hi-GAL, and blue from ASKAP. ©  INAF/Macquarie University/EMU

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