Breakthrough Discovery: ASKAP J1745-5051 Unlocks Multiwavelength Cosmic Signal Mysteries
June 2, 2026
A long-period transient labeled ASKAP J1745-5051 has been identified as the first source showing accretion-driven activity across radio, optical, and X-ray wavelengths, offering a Rosetta-stone-like framework for understanding similar cosmic signals.
Researchers say this multiwavelength record could unlock how to decipher other long-period transients and compare them to the Rosetta Stone analogy, marking a breakthrough in studying signals with limited wavelength information.
The study provides a concrete mechanism and observational framework across wavelengths, enabling a clearer path to interpret diverse long-period transients.
The extreme conditions in these systems—strong magnetic fields, intense gravity, and high-energy particle flows—cannot be reproduced on Earth, making this an essential astrophysical laboratory.
Multi-wavelength observations are crucial, with plans to continue data collection across facilities such as ASKAP, MeerKAT, optical telescopes, and space observatories to probe emission mechanisms and prevalence.
X-rays originate where accreted material hits the white dwarf, while radio emissions arise from magnetic-field interactions, explaining the non-simultaneity of their peaks.
ASKAP J1745-5051 is a cataclysmic variable where a white dwarf pulls gas from a companion, heating it to emit X-rays and generating focused radio bursts that repeat with the orbital period.
In this system, X-ray and radio peaks do not coincide, indicating distinct emission regions tied to accretion and magnetic activity within the binary.
ASKAP J1745-5051 is highlighted as a key object in the study of long-period radio transients.
The international collaboration includes teams from multiple countries and funding from OzGrav, NASA, Sloan Foundation, ERC, among others, leveraging ASKAP, ATCA, MeerKAT, SOAR, Magellan, Swift, and Einstein Probe.
The results are published in Nature Astronomy, signaling peer-reviewed confirmation of the findings.
Combining radio, optical, and X-ray data is essential to building a comprehensive picture of these complex systems and advancing understanding of transient cosmic events.
Summary based on 5 sources
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Sources

ScienceDaily • Jun 2, 2026
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