69 research outputs found

    The Deep Diffuse Extragalactic Radio Sky at 1.75 GHz

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    We present a study of diffuse extragalactic radio emission at 1.751.75\,GHz from part of the ELAIS-S1 field using the Australia Telescope Compact Array. The resulting mosaic is 2.462.46\,deg2^2, with a roughly constant noise region of 0.610.61\,deg2^2 used for analysis. The image has a beam size of 150×60150 \times60\,arcsec and instrumental σn=(52±5)μ\langle\sigma_{\rm n}\rangle= (52\pm5)\, \muJy beam1^{-1}. Using point-source models from the ATLAS survey, we subtract the discrete emission in this field for S150μS \ge 150\, \muJy beam1^{-1}. Comparison of the source-subtracted probability distribution, or \pd, with the predicted distribution from unsubtracted discrete emission and noise, yields an excess of (76±23)μ(76 \pm 23) \, \muJy beam1^{-1}. Taking this as an upper limit on any extended emission we constrain several models of extended source counts, assuming Ωsource2\Omega_{\rm source} \le 2\,arcmin. The best-fitting models yield temperatures of the radio background from extended emission of Tb=(10±7)T_{\rm b}=(10\pm7) \,mK, giving an upper limit on the total temperature at 1.751.75\,GHz of (73±10)(73\pm10)\,mK. Further modelling shows that our data are inconsistent with the reported excess temperature of ARCADE2 to a source-count limit of 1μ1\, \muJy. Our new data close a loop-hole in the previous constraints, because of the possibility of extended emission being resolved out at higher resolution. Additionally, we look at a model of cluster halo emission and two WIMP dark matter annihilation source-count models, and discuss general constraints on any predicted counts from such sources. Finally, we report the derived integral count at 1.41.4\,GHz using the deepest discrete count plus our new extended-emission limits, providing numbers that can be used for planning future ultra-deep surveys.Comment: 18 pages, 15 figures, 7 tables, Accepted by MNRA

    Discovery of magnetic fields along stacked cosmic filaments as revealed by radio and X-ray emission

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    Diffuse filaments connect galaxy clusters to form the cosmic web. Detecting these filaments could yield information on the magnetic field strength, cosmic ray population and temperature of intercluster gas, yet, the faint and large-scale nature of these bridges makes direct detections very challenging. Using multiple independent all-sky radio and X-ray maps we stack pairs of luminous red galaxies as tracers for cluster pairs. For the first time, we detect an average surface brightness between the clusters from synchrotron (radio) and thermal (X-ray) emission with 73 5\u3c3 significance, on physical scales larger than observed to date ( 653 Mpc). We obtain a synchrotron spectral index of \u3b1 43 -1.0 and estimates of the average magnetic field strength of 30 64 B 64 60 nG, derived from both equipartition and Inverse Compton arguments, implying a 5 to 15 per cent degree of field regularity when compared with Faraday rotation measure estimates. While the X-ray detection is inline with predictions, the average radio signal comes out higher than predicted by cosmological simulations and dark matter annihilation and decay models. This discovery demonstrates that there are connective structures between mass concentrations that are significantly magnetised, and the presence of sufficient cosmic rays to produce detectable synchrotron radiation

    Astronomy below the survey threshold in the SKA era

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    Astronomy at or below the 'survey threshold' has expanded significantly since the publication of the original 'Science with the Square Kilometer Array' in 1999 and its update in 2004. The techniques in this regime may be broadly (but far from exclusively) defined as 'confusion' or 'P(D)' analyses (analyses of one-point statistics), and 'stacking', accounting for the flux-density distribution of noise-limited images co-added at the positions of objects detected/isolated in a different waveband. Here we discuss the relevant issues, present some examples of recent analyses, and consider some of the consequences for the design and use of surveys with the SKA and its pathfinders

    Resolving the Radio Source Background: Deeper Understanding Through Confusion

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    We used the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) to image one primary beam area at 3 GHz with 8 arcsec FWHM resolution and 1.0 microJy/beam rms noise near the pointing center. The P(D) distribution from the central 10 arcmin of this confusion-limited image constrains the count of discrete sources in the 1 < S(microJy/beam) < 10 range. At this level the brightness-weighted differential count S^2 n(S) is converging rapidly, as predicted by evolutionary models in which the faintest radio sources are star-forming galaxies; and ~96$% of the background originating in galaxies has been resolved into discrete sources. About 63% of the radio background is produced by AGNs, and the remaining 37% comes from star-forming galaxies that obey the far-infrared (FIR) / radio correlation and account for most of the FIR background at lambda = 160 microns. Our new data confirm that radio sources powered by AGNs and star formation evolve at about the same rate, a result consistent with AGN feedback and the rough correlation of black hole and bulge stellar masses. The confusion at centimeter wavelengths is low enough that neither the planned SKA nor its pathfinder ASKAP EMU survey should be confusion limited, and the ultimate source detection limit imposed by "natural" confusion is < 0.01 microJy at 1.4 GHz. If discrete sources dominate the bright extragalactic background reported by ARCADE2 at 3.3 GHz, they cannot be located in or near galaxies and most are < 0.03 microJy at 1.4 GHz.Comment: 28 pages including 16 figures. ApJ accepted for publicatio
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