Kate Charlton

ORCID: 0000-0002-2925-2047
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About
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Research Areas
  • Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
  • Marine animal studies overview
  • Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
  • Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
  • Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
  • Cephalopods and Marine Biology
  • Animal Vocal Communication and Behavior
  • Identification and Quantification in Food

University of Cape Town
2024

Bottlenose dolphins have a global distribution throughout tropical and temperate waters, both inshore offshore. Many studies demonstrate the existence of at least two Tursiops species: truncatus, consisting offshore eco-types T. aduncus, coastal Indo-Pacific type known to extend south into waters down east coast Australia. To clarify taxonomic status populations (Port Phillip Bay Gippsland Lakes) bottlenose along Australia’s (Victoria), 346bp region mitochondrial-DNA (mtDNA) control was...

10.47536/jcrm.v8i2.713 article EN cc-by-nc IWC Journal of Cetacean Research and Management 2023-03-08

ABSTRACT In this study we report the spatially resolved, wideband spectral properties of three giant radio galaxies (GRGs) in COSMOS field: MGTC J095959.63+024608.6, J100016.84+015133.0, and J100022.85+031520.4. One these galaxies, J100022.85+031520.4, is reported here for first time, with a projected linear size 1.29 Mpc at redshift 0.1034. Unlike other two, it associated brightest cluster galaxy (BCG), making one few GRGs known to inhabit environments. We examine age distributions using...

10.1093/mnras/stae2543 article EN cc-by Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 2024-11-28

In this study we report spatially resolved, wideband spectral properties of three giant radio galaxies (GRGs) in the COSMOS field: MGTC J095959.63+024608.6 , J100016.84+015133.0 and J100022.85+031520.4. One such galaxy J100022.85+031520.4 is reported here for first time with a projected linear size 1.29 Mpc at redshift 0.1034. Unlike other two, it associated brightest cluster (BCG), making one few GRGs known to inhabit environments. We examine age distributions using new MeerKAT UHF-band...

10.48550/arxiv.2411.06813 preprint EN arXiv (Cornell University) 2024-11-11
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