The POlarised GLEAM Survey (POGS) II: Results from an All-Sky Rotation Measure Synthesis Survey at Long Wavelengths
C. J. Riseley, T. J. Galvin, C. Sobey, T. Vernstrom, S. V. White, X., Zhang, B. M. Gaensler, G. Heald, C. S. Anderson, T. M. O. Franzen, P. J., Hancock, N. Hurley-Walker, E. Lenc, C. L. Van Eck

TL;DR
This paper presents the results of a comprehensive low-frequency polarisation survey of the Southern sky, detecting over 500 sources and providing high-precision Faraday rotation measures to study magnetic fields.
Contribution
It offers the first large-scale, high-precision low-frequency polarisation survey, expanding knowledge of Galactic and extragalactic magnetic fields and identifying new pulsar candidates.
Findings
Detected 517 polarised sources, including 33 pulsars.
Achieved over an order of magnitude improvement in Faraday RM precision.
Identified new pulsar candidates among extragalactic sources.
Abstract
The low-frequency linearly-polarised radio source population is largely unexplored. However, a renaissance in low-frequency polarimetry has been enabled by pathfinder and precursor instruments for the Square Kilometre Array. In this second paper from the POlarised GaLactic and Extragalactic All-Sky Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) Survey -- the POlarised GLEAM Survey, or POGS -- we present the results from our all-sky MWA Phase I Faraday Rotation Measure survey. Our survey covers nearly the entire Southern sky in the Declination range to at a resolution between around three and seven arcminutes (depending on Declination) using data in the frequency range 169231 MHz. We have performed two targeted searches: the first covering 25,489 square degrees of sky, searching for extragalactic polarised sources; the second covering the entire sky South of Declination…
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