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We report on observations of the hydroxyl radical (OH) within The H{sc I}, OH Recombination line survey (THOR) pilot region. The region is bounded approximately between Galactic coordinates l=29.2 to 31.5$^circ$ and b=-1.0 to +1.0$^circ$ and includes the high-mass star forming region W43. We identify 103 maser sites, including 72 with 1612,MHz masers, 42 showing masers in either of the main line transitions at 1665 and 1667,MHz and four showing 1720,MHz masers. Most maser sites with either main-line or 1720,MHz emission are associated with star formation, whereas most of the 1612,MHz masers are associated with evolved stars. We find that nearly all of the main-line maser sites are co-spatial with an infrared source, detected by GLIMPSE. We also find diffuse OH emission, as well as OH in absorption towards selected unresolved or partially resolved sites. Extended OH absorption is found towards the well known star forming complex W43 Main.
SPLASH (the Southern Parkes Large-Area Survey in Hydroxyl) is a sensitive, unbiased and fully-sampled survey of the Southern Galactic Plane and Galactic Centre in all four ground-state transitions of the hydroxyl (OH) radical. The survey provides a d
We use observations from the Boolardy Engineering Test Array (BETA) of the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) telescope to search for transient radio sources in the field around the intermittent pulsar PSR J1107-5907. The pulsar is
The process of atomic-to-molecular (HI-to-H$_2$) gas conversion is fundamental for molecular-cloud formation and star formation. 21 cm observations of the star-forming region W43 revealed extremely high HI column densities, of 120-180 M$_{odot}$ pc$^
Context: The past decade has witnessed a large number of Galactic plane surveys at angular resolutions below 20. However, no comparable high-resolution survey exists at long radio wavelengths around 21cm in line and continuum emission. Methods: Emplo
The Radio Ammonia Mid-Plane Survey (RAMPS) is a molecular line survey that aims to map a portion of the Galactic midplane in the first quadrant of the Galaxy (l = 10 deg - 40 deg, |b| < 0.4 deg) using the Green Bank Telescope. We present results from