34 research outputs found
Accretion indicators for the 37 brightest radio sources in the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field
We study the 37 brightest radio sources in the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field
(SXDF). Using mid-IR (Spitzer MIPS 24 micron) data we expect to trace nuclear
accretion activity, even if it is obscured at optical wavelengths, unless the
obscuring column is extreme. Our results suggest that above the `FRI/FRII'
radio luminosity break most of the radio sources are associated with objects
that have excess mid-IR emission, only some of which are broad-line objects,
although there is one clear low-accretion-rate FRI. The fraction of objects
with mid-IR excess drops dramatically below the FRI/FRII break, although there
exists at least one high-accretion-rate QSO. Investigation of mid-IR and blue
excesses shows that they are correlated as predicted by a model in which a
torus of dust absorbs ~30% of the light, and the dust above and below the torus
scatters >~1% of the light.Comment: 4 pages, 2 figures, to appear in conference proceedings of 'A Century
of Cosmology; Past, Present and Future', Venice 200
Bent It Like FRs: Extended Radio AGN in the COSMOS Field and Their Large-Scale Environment
A fascinating topic in radio astronomy is how to associate the complexity of observed radio structures with their environment in order to understand their interplay and the reason for the plethora of radio structures found in surveys. In this project, we explore the distortion of the radio structure of Fanaroff–Riley (FR)-type radio sources in the VLA-COSMOS Large Project at 3 GHz and relate it to their large-scale environment. We quantify the distortion by using the angle formed between the jets/lobes of two-sided FRs, namely bent angle (BA). Our sample includes 108 objects in the redshift range 0.0
Bent It Like FRs: Extended Radio AGN in the COSMOS Field and Their Large-Scale Environment
A fascinating topic in radio astronomy is how to associate the complexity of observed radio structures with their environment in order to understand their interplay and the reason for the plethora of radio structures found in surveys. In this project, we explore the distortion of the radio structure of Fanaroff–Riley (FR)-type radio sources in the VLA-COSMOS Large Project at 3 GHz and relate it to their large-scale environment. We quantify the distortion by using the angle formed between the jets/lobes of two-sided FRs, namely bent angle (BA). Our sample includes 108 objects in the redshift range 0.0
The VLA-COSMOS 3 GHz Large Project: Star formation properties and radio luminosity functions of AGN with moderate-to-high radiative luminosities out to
We study a sample of 1,604 moderate-to-high radiative luminosity active
galactic nuclei (HLAGN) selected at 3 GHz within the VLA-COSMOS 3 GHz Large
Project. These were classified by combining multiple AGN diagnostics: X-ray
data, mid-infrared data and broad-band spectral energy distribution fitting. We
decompose the total radio 1.4 GHz luminosity () into
the emission originating from star formation and AGN activity by measuring the
excess in relative to the infrared-radio
correlation of star-forming galaxies. To quantify the excess, for each source
we calculate the AGN fraction (), the fractional contribution
of AGN activity to . The majority of the HLAGN,
, are dominated by star-forming processes (),
while are dominated by AGN-related radio emission
(). We use the AGN-related 1.4 GHz emission to derive the 1.4
GHz AGN luminosity functions of HLAGN. By assuming pure density and pure
luminosity evolution models we constrain their cosmic evolution out to
, finding and . These evolutionary laws show that
the number and luminosity density of HLAGN increased from higher redshifts
() up to a maximum in the redshift range , followed by a
decline towards local values. By scaling the 1.4 GHz AGN luminosity to kinetic
luminosity using the standard conversion, we estimate the kinetic luminosity
density as a function of redshift. We compare our result to the semi-analytic
models of radio mode feedback finding that this feedback could have played an
important role in the context of AGN-host coevolution in HLAGN which show
evidence of AGN-related radio emission ().Comment: 20 pages, 14 figure
A New Task: Deriving Semantic Class Targets for the Physical Sciences
We define deriving semantic class targets as a novel multi-modal task. By
doing so, we aim to improve classification schemes in the physical sciences
which can be severely abstracted and obfuscating. We address this task for
upcoming radio astronomy surveys and present the derived semantic radio galaxy
morphology class targets.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, Accepted at Fifth Workshop on Machine Learning and
the Physical Sciences (NeurIPS 2022), Neural Information Processing Systems
202
The non-linear infrared-radio correlation of low-z galaxies: implications for redshift evolution, a new radio SFR recipe, and how to minimize selection bias
The infrared-radio correlation (IRRC) underpins many commonly used radio luminosity-star formation rate (SFR) calibrations. In preparation for the new generation of radio surveys we revisit the IRRC of low-z galaxies by (a) drawing on the best currently available IR and 1.4 GHz radio photometry, plus ancillary data over the widest possible area, and (b) carefully assessing potential systematics. We compile a catalogue of ∼9,500 z < 0.2 galaxies and derive their 1.4 GHz radio (L1.4), total IR, and monochromatic IR luminosities in up to seven bands, allowing us to parameterize the wavelength-dependence of monochromatic IRRCs from 22-500 μm. For the first time for low-z samples, we quantify how poorly matched IR and radio survey depths bias measured median IR/radio ratios, q¯¯TIR , and discuss the level of biasing expected for low-z IRRC studies in ASKAP/MeerKAT fields. For our subset of ∼2,000 high-confidence star-forming galaxies we find a median q¯¯TIR of 2.54 (scatter: 0.17 dex). We show that q¯¯TIR correlates with L1.4, implying a non-linear IRRC with slope 1.11±0.01. Our new L1.4-SFR calibration, which incorporates this non-linearity, reproduces SFRs from panchromatic SED fits substantially better than previous IRRC-based recipes. Finally, we match the evolutionary slope of recently measured q¯¯TIR -redshift trends without having to invoke redshift evolution of the IRRC. In this framework, the redshift evolution of q¯¯TIR reported at GHz frequencies in the literature is the consequence of a partial, redshift-dependent sampling of a non-linear IRRC obeyed by low-z and distant galaxies
The VLA-COSMOS 3 GHz Large Project : Evolution of Specific Star Formation Rates out to z similar to 5
We provide a coherent, uniform measurement of the evolution of the logarithmic star formation rate (SFR)-stellar mass (M-*) relation, called the main sequence (MS) of star-forming galaxies, for star-forming and all galaxies out to z similar to 5. We measure the MS using mean stacks of 3 GHz radio-continuum images to derive average SFRs for similar to 200,000 mass-selected galaxies at z > 0.3 in the COSMOS field. We describe the MS relation by adopting a new model that incorporates a linear relation at low stellar mass (log(M-*/M-circle dot) <10) and a flattening at high stellar mass that becomes more prominent at low redshift (z <1.5). We find that the SFR density peaks at 1.5 <z <2, and at each epoch there is a characteristic stellar mass (M-* = 1-4 x 10(10)M(circle dot)) that contributes the most to the overall SFR density. This characteristic mass increases with redshift, at least to z similar to 2.5. We find no significant evidence for variations in the MS relation for galaxies in different environments traced by the galaxy number density at 0.3 <z <3, nor for galaxies in X-ray groups at z similar to 0.75. We confirm that massive bulge-dominated galaxies have lower SFRs than disk-dominated galaxies at a fixed stellar mass at z <1.2. As a consequence, the increase in bulge-dominated galaxies in the local star-forming population leads to a flattening of the MS at high stellar masses. This indicates that "mass quenching" is linked with changes in the morphological composition of galaxies at a fixed stellar mass.Peer reviewe
The Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field - II. The 37 brightest radio sources
We study the 37 brightest radio sources in the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field
(SXDF). We have spectroscopic redshifts for 24 of 37 objects and photometric
redshifts for the remainder, yielding a median redshift z_med for the whole
sample of z_med ~= 1.1 and a median radio luminosity close to the `FRI/FRII'
luminosity divide. Using mid-IR (Spitzer MIPS 24 um) data we expect to trace
nuclear accretion activity, even if it is obscured at optical wavelengths,
unless the obscuring column is extreme. Our results suggest that above the
FRI/FRII radio luminosity break most of the radio sources are associated with
objects that have excess mid-IR emission, only some of which are broad-line
objects, although there is one clear low-accretion-rate object with an FRI
radio structure. For extended steep-spectrum radio sources, the fraction of
objects with mid-IR excess drops dramatically below the FRI/FRII luminosity
break, although there exists at least one high-accretion-rate `radio-quiet'
QSO. We have therefore shown that the strong link between radio luminosity (or
radio structure) and accretion properties, well known at z ~ 0.1, persists to z
~ 1. Investigation of mid-IR and blue excesses shows that they are correlated
as predicted by a model in which, when significant accretion exists, a torus of
dust absorbs ~30% of the light, and the dust above and below the torus scatters
>~1% of the light.Comment: Accepted for publication by MNRAS; 39 pages, 7 figures, 4 table
Radio galaxy zoo EMU: towards a semantic radio galaxy morphology taxonomy
© 2023 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Royal Astronomical Society. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)We present a novel natural language processing (NLP) approach to deriving plain English descriptors for science cases otherwise restricted by obfuscating technical terminology. We address the limitations of common radio galaxy morphology classifications by applying this approach. We experimentally derive a set of semantic tags for the Radio Galaxy Zoo EMU (Evolutionary Map of the Universe) project and the wider astronomical community. We collect 8486 plain English annotations of radio galaxy morphology, from which we derive a taxonomy of tags. The tags are plain English. The result is an extensible framework, which is more flexible, more easily communicated, and more sensitive to rare feature combinations, which are indescribable using the current framework of radio astronomy classifications.Peer reviewe