The extragalactic radio-source population at 95 GHz

We have used the AustraliaTelescope Compact Array (ATCA)at 95 GHzto carry out continuumobservations of 130 extragalactic radio sources selected from the Australia Telescope 20 GHz(AT20G) survey.We use a triple-correlation method to measure simultaneous 20- and 95-GHzflux densities for these objects,...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sadler, E., Ricci, R., Ekers, Ronald, Sault, R., Jackson, Carole, De Zotti, G.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Oxford University Press 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://mnras.oxfordjournals.org/content/385/3/1656
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31004
_version_ 1848753254207324160
author Sadler, E.
Ricci, R.
Ekers, Ronald
Sault, R.
Jackson, Carole
De Zotti, G.
author_facet Sadler, E.
Ricci, R.
Ekers, Ronald
Sault, R.
Jackson, Carole
De Zotti, G.
author_sort Sadler, E.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description We have used the AustraliaTelescope Compact Array (ATCA)at 95 GHzto carry out continuumobservations of 130 extragalactic radio sources selected from the Australia Telescope 20 GHz(AT20G) survey.We use a triple-correlation method to measure simultaneous 20- and 95-GHzflux densities for these objects, and over 90 per cent of our target sources are detected at95 GHz. We demonstrate that the ATCA can robustly measure 95-GHz flux densities with anaccuracy of ~10 per cent in a few minutes for sources stronger than about 50 mJy.We measure the distribution of radio spectral indices in a flux-limited sample of extragalacticsources, and show that the median 20–95 GHz spectral index does not vary significantly withflux density for S20 >150 mJy. This finding allows us to estimate the extragalactic radio sourcecounts at 95 GHz by combining our observed 20–95 GHz spectral-index distribution with theaccurate 20-GHz source counts measured in the AT20G survey.Our derived 95-GHz source counts at flux densities above 80 mJy are significantly lowerthan those found by several previous studies. The main reason is that most radio sources withflat or rising spectra in the frequency range 5–20 GHz show a spectral turnover between 20and 95 GHz. As a result, there are fewer 95-GHz sources (by almost a factor of 2 at 0.1 Jy)than would be predicted on the basis of extrapolation from the source populations seen inlower-frequency surveys. We also derive the predicted confusion noise in cosmic microwavebackground surveys at 95 GHz and find a value 20–30 per cent lower than previous estimates.The 95-GHz source population at the flux levels probed by this study is dominated by quasistellarobjects with a median redshift z ~ 1. We find a correlation between optical magnitudeand 95-GHz flux density which suggests that many of the brightest 95-GHz sources may berelativistically beamed, with both the optical and millimetre continuum significantly brightenedby Doppler boosting.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T08:21:35Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-31004
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T08:21:35Z
publishDate 2008
publisher Oxford University Press
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-310042017-02-28T01:39:15Z The extragalactic radio-source population at 95 GHz Sadler, E. Ricci, R. Ekers, Ronald Sault, R. Jackson, Carole De Zotti, G. radio continuum: general quasars: general cosmic - microwave background galaxies: active techniques: interferometric radio continuum: galaxies We have used the AustraliaTelescope Compact Array (ATCA)at 95 GHzto carry out continuumobservations of 130 extragalactic radio sources selected from the Australia Telescope 20 GHz(AT20G) survey.We use a triple-correlation method to measure simultaneous 20- and 95-GHzflux densities for these objects, and over 90 per cent of our target sources are detected at95 GHz. We demonstrate that the ATCA can robustly measure 95-GHz flux densities with anaccuracy of ~10 per cent in a few minutes for sources stronger than about 50 mJy.We measure the distribution of radio spectral indices in a flux-limited sample of extragalacticsources, and show that the median 20–95 GHz spectral index does not vary significantly withflux density for S20 >150 mJy. This finding allows us to estimate the extragalactic radio sourcecounts at 95 GHz by combining our observed 20–95 GHz spectral-index distribution with theaccurate 20-GHz source counts measured in the AT20G survey.Our derived 95-GHz source counts at flux densities above 80 mJy are significantly lowerthan those found by several previous studies. The main reason is that most radio sources withflat or rising spectra in the frequency range 5–20 GHz show a spectral turnover between 20and 95 GHz. As a result, there are fewer 95-GHz sources (by almost a factor of 2 at 0.1 Jy)than would be predicted on the basis of extrapolation from the source populations seen inlower-frequency surveys. We also derive the predicted confusion noise in cosmic microwavebackground surveys at 95 GHz and find a value 20–30 per cent lower than previous estimates.The 95-GHz source population at the flux levels probed by this study is dominated by quasistellarobjects with a median redshift z ~ 1. We find a correlation between optical magnitudeand 95-GHz flux density which suggests that many of the brightest 95-GHz sources may berelativistically beamed, with both the optical and millimetre continuum significantly brightenedby Doppler boosting. 2008 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31004 http://mnras.oxfordjournals.org/content/385/3/1656 Oxford University Press restricted
spellingShingle radio continuum: general
quasars: general
cosmic - microwave background
galaxies: active
techniques: interferometric
radio continuum: galaxies
Sadler, E.
Ricci, R.
Ekers, Ronald
Sault, R.
Jackson, Carole
De Zotti, G.
The extragalactic radio-source population at 95 GHz
title The extragalactic radio-source population at 95 GHz
title_full The extragalactic radio-source population at 95 GHz
title_fullStr The extragalactic radio-source population at 95 GHz
title_full_unstemmed The extragalactic radio-source population at 95 GHz
title_short The extragalactic radio-source population at 95 GHz
title_sort extragalactic radio-source population at 95 ghz
topic radio continuum: general
quasars: general
cosmic - microwave background
galaxies: active
techniques: interferometric
radio continuum: galaxies
url http://mnras.oxfordjournals.org/content/385/3/1656
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/31004