The Cold Neutral Medium in the Milky Way ISM with ASKAP

Special Colloquium
Dr. Callum Lynn
SCHEDULED
Australian National University

Observations of neutral hydrogen (HI) within galaxies are an important tracer to probe the evolution of complex physical processes that occur within the interstellar medium (ISM). With its close proximity, the gas of the Milky Way provides us the ideal laboratory to investigate these processes and the eventual formation of molecular clouds at scales beyond the sub-grid resolution of most numerical ISM simulations. Observations of this calibre are vital to test our current theoretical understanding of the turbulent cascade and formation of cold gas. The SKA precursor, ASKAP, has observed the Milky Way foreground towards the Magellanic System in unprecedented detail, with its current spatial resolution and unbiased detection manner cataloguing hundreds of Milky Way HI absorption sources within a relatively small field of view, rivalling the combined catalogue of previous detections across the entire sky. I will present recent work done by the GASKAP-HI Collaboration using these latest advancements in source density made by the GASKAP-HI survey. More specifically I will discuss the unique prospect of calculating the structure function of optical depth and other HI properties across a filamentary region, to better understand the spatial structure of the cold neutral medium and its formation. I will also discuss the correlation between HI and dust and how the increased background source density has enabled the ability to detect higher temperature phases of gas through stacking spectra to improve the signal-to-noise beyond the current observational sensitivity of ASKAP.

Jet precession and variability in M81*

Master Colloquium
Prathamesh Ingale
SCHEDULED
MPIfR

Active galactic nuclei are some of the most powerful sources in the cosmos and M81*, a nearby low-luminosity AGN, offers a unique window into their jet dynamics. In this thesis, we explore compelling evidence of jet precession and flaring variability in M81* using over 60 high-resolution VLBI observations (VLBA, EVN) and complementary multi-frequency monitoring with the Effelsberg radio telescope. Our analysis traces the jet's evolving orientation and disentangles its variability across time and frequency, providing new insights into AGN behavior in the sub-Eddington regime.