Spectral Variability of Radio Sources at Low Frequencies
K. Ross, J. R. Callingham, N. Hurley-Walker, N. Seymour, P. Hancock,, T. M. O. Franzen, J. Morgan, S. V. White, M. E. Bell, P. Patil

TL;DR
This study investigates spectral variability in over 21,000 low-frequency radio sources using GLEAM survey data, revealing significant variability in a subset and highlighting the dynamic nature of the radio sky at these frequencies.
Contribution
The paper introduces new methodologies for detecting and classifying spectral variability in large radio source populations at low frequencies.
Findings
Identified 323 sources with significant spectral variability over a year.
Classified 51 sources as showing spectral shape changes.
Variability is more common in peaked-spectrum sources.
Abstract
Spectral variability of radio sources encodes information about the conditions of intervening media, source structure, and emission processes. With new low-frequency radio interferometers observing over wide fractional bandwidths, studies of spectral variability for a large population of extragalactic radio sources are now possible. Using two epochs of observations from the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky Murchison Widefield Array (GLEAM) survey that were taken one year apart, we search for spectral variability across 100--230 MHz for 21,558 sources. We present methodologies for detecting variability in the spectrum between epochs and for classifying the type of variability: either as a change in spectral shape or as a uniform change in flux density across the bandwidth. We identify 323 sources with significant spectral variability over a year-long timescale. Of the 323 variable…
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