A VOEvent based automatic trigger system for the Murchison Widefield Array
P. J. Hancock, G. E. Anderson, A. Williams, M. Sokolowski, S. E., Tremblay, A.Rowlinson, B. Crosse, B. W. Meyers, C. R. Lynch, A. Zic, A. P., Beardsley, D. Emrich, T. M. O. Franzen, L. Horsley, M. Johnston-Hollitt, D., L. Kaplan, D. Kenney, M. F. Morales, D. Pallot, K. Steele

TL;DR
This paper presents a flexible, VOEvent-based automatic trigger system for the Murchison Widefield Array, enabling rapid, multi-messenger follow-up observations of transient astrophysical events with improved accuracy and responsiveness.
Contribution
It introduces a novel VOEvent-based triggering system for the MWA, enhancing its capability to respond to external multi-messenger alerts with greater flexibility and precision.
Findings
System successfully responds to external triggers
Supports both correlator and Voltage Capture System modes
Operational since 2018B semester
Abstract
The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) is an electronically steered low frequency (\,MHz) radio interferometer, with a `slew' time less than 8seconds. Low frequency (\,MHz) radio telescopes are ideally suited for rapid-response follow-up of transients due to their large field of view, the inverted spectrum of coherent emission, and the fact that the dispersion delay between a 1GHz and 100MHz pulse is on the order of \,min for dispersion measures of \,pc/cm. The MWA has previously been used to provide fast follow up for transient events including gamma-ray bursts, fast radio bursts, and gravitational waves, using systems that respond to gamma-ray coordinates network (GCN) packet-based notifications. We describe a system for automatically triggering MWA observations of such events, based on VOEvent triggers, which is more flexible, capable, and accurate…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
