Breakthrough Listen follow-up of the reported transient signal observed at the Arecibo Telescope in the direction of Ross 128

We undertook observations with the Green Bank Telescope, simultaneously with the 300 m telescope in Arecibo, as a follow-up of a possible flare of radio emission from Ross 128. We report here the non-detections from the GBT observations in C band (4–8 GHz), as well as non-detections in archival data...

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Main Authors: Enriquez, J., Siemion, A., Dana, R., Croft, S., Méndez, A., Xu, A., DeBoer, D., Gajjar, V., Hellbourg, Gregory, Isaacson, H., others
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/73841
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author Enriquez, J.
Siemion, A.
Dana, R.
Croft, S.
Méndez, A.
Xu, A.
DeBoer, D.
Gajjar, V.
Hellbourg, Gregory
Isaacson, H.
others
author_facet Enriquez, J.
Siemion, A.
Dana, R.
Croft, S.
Méndez, A.
Xu, A.
DeBoer, D.
Gajjar, V.
Hellbourg, Gregory
Isaacson, H.
others
author_sort Enriquez, J.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description We undertook observations with the Green Bank Telescope, simultaneously with the 300 m telescope in Arecibo, as a follow-up of a possible flare of radio emission from Ross 128. We report here the non-detections from the GBT observations in C band (4–8 GHz), as well as non-detections in archival data at L band (1.1–1.9 GHz). We suggest that a likely scenario is that the emission comes from one or more satellites passing through the same region of the sky.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T10:58:17Z
format Journal Article
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T10:58:17Z
publishDate 2017
recordtype eprints
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-738412019-07-17T08:08:07Z Breakthrough Listen follow-up of the reported transient signal observed at the Arecibo Telescope in the direction of Ross 128 Enriquez, J. Siemion, A. Dana, R. Croft, S. Méndez, A. Xu, A. DeBoer, D. Gajjar, V. Hellbourg, Gregory Isaacson, H. others We undertook observations with the Green Bank Telescope, simultaneously with the 300 m telescope in Arecibo, as a follow-up of a possible flare of radio emission from Ross 128. We report here the non-detections from the GBT observations in C band (4–8 GHz), as well as non-detections in archival data at L band (1.1–1.9 GHz). We suggest that a likely scenario is that the emission comes from one or more satellites passing through the same region of the sky. 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/73841 10.1017/S1473550417000465 fulltext
spellingShingle Enriquez, J.
Siemion, A.
Dana, R.
Croft, S.
Méndez, A.
Xu, A.
DeBoer, D.
Gajjar, V.
Hellbourg, Gregory
Isaacson, H.
others
Breakthrough Listen follow-up of the reported transient signal observed at the Arecibo Telescope in the direction of Ross 128
title Breakthrough Listen follow-up of the reported transient signal observed at the Arecibo Telescope in the direction of Ross 128
title_full Breakthrough Listen follow-up of the reported transient signal observed at the Arecibo Telescope in the direction of Ross 128
title_fullStr Breakthrough Listen follow-up of the reported transient signal observed at the Arecibo Telescope in the direction of Ross 128
title_full_unstemmed Breakthrough Listen follow-up of the reported transient signal observed at the Arecibo Telescope in the direction of Ross 128
title_short Breakthrough Listen follow-up of the reported transient signal observed at the Arecibo Telescope in the direction of Ross 128
title_sort breakthrough listen follow-up of the reported transient signal observed at the arecibo telescope in the direction of ross 128
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/73841