TY - JOUR
T1 - Ultra Steep Spectrum Radio Sources in the Lockman Hole: SERVS Identifications and Redshift Distribution at the Faintest Radio Fluxes
AU - Afonso, J.
AU - Bizzocchi, L.
AU - Ibar, E.
AU - Grossi, M.
AU - Simpson, C.
AU - Chapman, S.
AU - Jarvis, M. J.
AU - Rottgering, H.
AU - Norris, R. P.
AU - Dunlop, J.
AU - Ivison, R. J.
AU - Messias, H.
AU - Pforr, J.
AU - Vaccari, M.
AU - Seymour, N.
AU - Best, P.
AU - González-Solares, E.
AU - Farrah, D.
AU - Fernandes, C. A. C.
AU - Huang, J.-S.
AU - Lacy, M.
AU - Maraston, C.
AU - Marchetti, L.
AU - Mauduit, J.-C.
AU - Oliver, S.
AU - Rigopoulou, D.
AU - Stanford, S. A.
AU - Surace, J.
AU - Zeimann, G.
PY - 2011/12/1
Y1 - 2011/12/1
N2 - Ultra steep spectrum (USS) radio sources have been successfully used to
select powerful radio sources at high redshifts (z >~ 2). Typically
restricted to large-sky surveys and relatively bright radio flux
densities, it has gradually become possible to extend the USS search to
sub-mJy levels, thanks to the recent appearance of sensitive
low-frequency radio facilities. Here a first detailed analysis of the
nature of the faintest USS sources is presented. By using Giant
Metrewave Radio Telescope and Very Large Array radio observations of the
Lockman Hole at 610 MHz and 1.4 GHz, a sample of 58 USS sources, with
610 MHz integrated fluxes above 100 μJy, is assembled. Deep infrared
data at 3.6 and 4.5 μm from the Spitzer Extragalactic Representative
Volume Survey (SERVS) are used to reliably identify counterparts for 48
(83%) of these sources, showing an average total magnitude of
[3.6]AB = 19.8 mag. Spectroscopic redshifts for 14 USS
sources, together with photometric redshift estimates, improved by the
use of the deep SERVS data, for a further 19 objects, show redshifts
ranging from z = 0.1 to z = 2.8, peaking at z ~ 0.6 and tailing off at
high redshifts. The remaining 25 USS sources, with no redshift estimate,
include the faintest [3.6] magnitudes, with 10 sources undetected at 3.6
and 4.5 μm (typically [3.6] >~ 22-23 mag from local measurements),
which suggests the likely existence of higher redshifts among the
sub-mJy USS population. The comparison with the Square Kilometre Array
Design Studies Simulated Skies models indicates that Fanaroff-Riley type
I radio sources and radio-quiet active galactic nuclei may constitute
the bulk of the faintest USS population, and raises the possibility that
the high efficiency of the USS technique for the selection of
high-redshift sources remains even at the sub-mJy level.
AB - Ultra steep spectrum (USS) radio sources have been successfully used to
select powerful radio sources at high redshifts (z >~ 2). Typically
restricted to large-sky surveys and relatively bright radio flux
densities, it has gradually become possible to extend the USS search to
sub-mJy levels, thanks to the recent appearance of sensitive
low-frequency radio facilities. Here a first detailed analysis of the
nature of the faintest USS sources is presented. By using Giant
Metrewave Radio Telescope and Very Large Array radio observations of the
Lockman Hole at 610 MHz and 1.4 GHz, a sample of 58 USS sources, with
610 MHz integrated fluxes above 100 μJy, is assembled. Deep infrared
data at 3.6 and 4.5 μm from the Spitzer Extragalactic Representative
Volume Survey (SERVS) are used to reliably identify counterparts for 48
(83%) of these sources, showing an average total magnitude of
[3.6]AB = 19.8 mag. Spectroscopic redshifts for 14 USS
sources, together with photometric redshift estimates, improved by the
use of the deep SERVS data, for a further 19 objects, show redshifts
ranging from z = 0.1 to z = 2.8, peaking at z ~ 0.6 and tailing off at
high redshifts. The remaining 25 USS sources, with no redshift estimate,
include the faintest [3.6] magnitudes, with 10 sources undetected at 3.6
and 4.5 μm (typically [3.6] >~ 22-23 mag from local measurements),
which suggests the likely existence of higher redshifts among the
sub-mJy USS population. The comparison with the Square Kilometre Array
Design Studies Simulated Skies models indicates that Fanaroff-Riley type
I radio sources and radio-quiet active galactic nuclei may constitute
the bulk of the faintest USS population, and raises the possibility that
the high efficiency of the USS technique for the selection of
high-redshift sources remains even at the sub-mJy level.
KW - galaxies: active
KW - galaxies: evolution
KW - galaxies: high-redshift
KW - radio continuum: galaxies
KW - surveys
M3 - Article
VL - 743
JO - Astrophysical Journal
JF - Astrophysical Journal
SN - 0004-637X
IS - 2
M1 - 122
ER -