English

Discovering Exotic AGN behind the Magellanic Clouds

Astrophysics of Galaxies 2021-02-03 v1

Abstract

The nearby Magellanic Clouds system covers more than 200 square degrees on the sky. Much of it has been mapped across the electromagnetic spectrum at high angular resolution and sensitivity X-ray (XMM-Newton), UV (UVIT), optical (SMASH), IR (VISTA, WISE, Spitzer, Herschel), radio (ATCA, ASKAP, MeerKAT). This provides us with an excellent dataset to explore the galaxy populations behind the stellar-rich Magellanic Clouds. We seek to identify and characterise AGN via machine learning algorithms on this exquisite data set. Our project focuses not on establishing sequences and distributions of common types of galaxies and active galactic nuclei (AGN), but seeks to identify extreme examples, building on the recent accidental discoveries of unique AGN behind the Magellanic Clouds.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2004.04531,
  title  = {Discovering Exotic AGN behind the Magellanic Clouds},
  author = {Clara M. Pennock and Jacco Th. van Loon and Cameron Bell and Miroslav Filipović and Tana Joseph and Eleni Vardoulaki},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2004.04531},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

Proceedings paper of the IAU symposium "Nuclear Activity in Galaxies Across Cosmic Time" (Ethiopia) accepted to be published under the Cambridge University Press, eds. M. Povic, P. Marziani, J. Masegosa, H. Netzer, S. H. Negu, and S. B. Tessema

R2 v1 2026-06-23T14:45:33.471Z