ASKAP J1832 is an object of uncertain nature with abnormal emissions
An article published in the journal “Nature” reports a study on ASKAP J1832-0911, or simply ASKAP J1832, an object whose nature is still uncertain. A team of researchers combined data collected by different instruments, including NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory and the ASKAP radio telescope, to detect the emissions coming from this object. This allowed them to reveal anomalies with respect to the categories considered to try to identify it.
The radio emissions led to cataloging it as a long-period radio transient, but ASKAP J1832 has variable emissions of the same duration in X-rays as well. An object with that type of emissions has never been found before, so it arouses a lot of curiosity. It could be a magnetar or a white dwarf with a companion star, but its behavior remains strange, so the investigations will continue.
