Description
In order to determine the relationship between the faint X-ray and faint radio source populations, and hence to help understand the X-ray and radio emission mechanisms in those faint source populations, the authors have made a deep 1.4-GHz Very Large Array radio survey of the 13<sup>h</sup> 34<sup>m</sup> 37<sup>s</sup>, +37<sup>o</sup> 54' 44" (J2000) ROSAT/XMM-Newton X-ray Survey Area (McHardy et al. 1998, MNRAS, 295, 641; Loaring et al. 2005, MNRAS, 362, 1371: the catalog of XMM-Newton sources from the latter paper is available at the HEASARC as the ROS13HRXMM table). From a combined VLA data set of 10 hours of B-configuration data and 14 hours of A-configuration data, maps with 3.35-arcsec resolution and a noise limit of 7.5 microJansky (µJy) were constructed. A complete sample of 449 sources was detected within a 30-arcmin diameter region above a 4-sigma detection limit of 30 uJy, at the map center, making this one of the deepest radio surveys at this frequency. The differential source count shows a significant upturn at sub-milliJansky flux densities, similar to that seen in other deep surveys at 1.4 GHz (e.g. the Phoenix survey, Hopkins et al. 2003, AJ, 125, 465: available at the HEASARC as the PDS1P4GHZ table), but larger than that seen in the Hubble Deep Field (HDF) which may have been selected to be underdense. This upturn is well modeled by the emergence of a population of medium-redshift star-forming galaxies which dominate at faint flux densities. The brighter source counts are well modeled by active galactic nuclei. This HEASARC table contains the catalog of 449 radio sources in a region of 30-arcmin diameter centered on the ROSAT/XMM 13-hours field which were detected at 1.4 GHz (20 cm) above a detection threshold of 4 sigma, equivalent to 30 uJy at the phase center. This table was created by the HEASARC in July 2013 based on <a href="https://cdsarc.cds.unistra.fr/ftp/cats/J/MNRAS/352/131">CDS Catalog J/MNRAS/352/131</a> file table a1.dat. This is a service provided by NASA HEASARC .
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