Extragalactic Peaked-Spectrum Radio Sources at Low Frequencies

Callingham, J. R., Ekers, R. D., Gaensler, B. M., Line, J. L. B., Hurley-Walker, N., Sadler, E. M., Tingay, S. J., Hancock, P. J., Bell, M. E., Dwarakanath, K. S., For, B. -Q., Franzen, T. M. O., Hindson, Luke, Johnston-Hollitt, M., Kapinska, A. D., Lenc, E., McKinley, B., Morgan, J., Offringa, A. R., Procopio, P., Staveley-Smith, L., Wayth, R. B., Wu, C. and Zheng, Q. (2017) Extragalactic Peaked-Spectrum Radio Sources at Low Frequencies. The Astrophysical Journal, 836 (2). ISSN 0004-637X
Copy

We present a sample of 1,483 sources that display spectral peaks between 72 MHz and 1.4 GHz, selected from the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky Murchison Widefield Array (GLEAM) survey. The GLEAM survey is the widest fractional bandwidth all-sky survey to date, ideal for identifying peaked-spectrum sources at low radio frequencies. Our peaked-spectrum sources are the low frequency analogues of gigahertz-peaked spectrum (GPS) and compact-steep spectrum (CSS) sources, which have been hypothesized to be the precursors to massive radio galaxies. Our sample more than doubles the number of known peaked-spectrum candidates, and 95% of our sample have a newly characterized spectral peak. We highlight that some GPS sources peaking above 5 GHz have had multiple epochs of nuclear activity, and demonstrate the possibility of identifying high redshift ($z > 2$) galaxies via steep optically thin spectral indices and low observed peak frequencies. The distribution of the optically thick spectral indices of our sample is consistent with past GPS/CSS samples but with a large dispersion, suggesting that the spectral peak is a product of an inhomogeneous environment that is individualistic. We find no dependence of observed peak frequency with redshift, consistent with the peaked-spectrum sample comprising both local CSS sources and high-redshift GPS sources. The 5 GHz luminosity distribution lacks the brightest GPS and CSS sources of previous samples, implying that a convolution of source evolution and redshift influences the type of peaked-spectrum sources identified below 1 GHz. Finally, we discuss sources with optically thick spectral indices that exceed the synchrotron self-absorption limit.


picture_as_pdf
1701.02771.pdf
subject
Submitted Version

View Download

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core OPENAIRE RIOXX2 XML METS Data Cite XML OpenURL ContextObject ASCII Citation OpenURL ContextObject in Span HTML Citation MPEG-21 DIDL MODS
Export

Downloads