- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/445/465
- Title:
- ATCA 18.5 and 22GHz fluxes of Kuehr 5GHz sample
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/445/465
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We discuss our ATCA 18.5 and 22GHz flux density measurements of Southern extragalactic sources in the complete 5GHz sample of Kuehr et al. (1981, Cat. <VIII/5>). The high frequency (5-18.5GHz) spectral indices of steep-spectrum sources for which we have 18.5GHz data (66% of the complete sample) are systematically steeper than the low frequency (2.7-5GHz) ones, and there is evidence of an anti-correlation of high-frequency spectral index with luminosity. The completeness of 18.5GHz data is much higher (89%) for flat-spectrum sources (mostly quasars), which also exhibit a spectral steepening. Taking advantage of the almost complete redshift information on flat-spectrum quasars, we have estimated their 5GHz luminosity function in several redshift bins. The results confirm that their radio luminosity density peaks at z_peak about 2.5 but do not provide evidence for deviations from pure luminosity evolution as hinted at by other data sets. A comparison of our 22GHz flux densities with WMAP K-band data for flat-spectrum sources suggests that WMAP flux densities may be low by a median factor of about 1.2. The extrapolations of 5GHz counts and luminosity functions of flat-spectrum radio quasars using the observed distribution of the 5-18.5GHz spectral indices match those derived directly from WMAP data, indicating that the high frequency WMAP survey does not detect any large population of FSRQs with anomalous spectra.
Number of results to display per page
Search Results
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/VIII/63
- Title:
- ATESP radio survey. II.
- Short Name:
- VIII/63
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The ATESP survey is a radio survey accomplished with the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) at 1.4 GHz over a region of 26 square degrees centered at -40 and ranging in RA from 22h30m to 01h15m. The survey consists of 16 radio mosaics with 8x14 arcsec resolution and uniform sensitivity (1 sigma noise = 79 microJy). The final 6 sigmas catalogue contains 2960 sources down to a detection limit of 0.5 mJy. This region is superposed to the redshift survey ESO Slice Project (ESP) and is partly covered by the EIS survey (Patch A; see Cat. J/A+AS/130/323). Table 3 summarizes the main parameters for the final 16 mosaics: for each mosaic are listed the number of fields composing it (columns x rows), the tangent point (sky position used for geometry calculations) and the synthesized beam (size and position angle). The spatial resolution can vary from mosaic to mosaic depending on the particular array (6A, 6C or 6D) used in the observations. The mean value for the synthesized beam is 8"x14". The last three columns of Table 3 show the results of the noise analysis. For each mosaic we report the minimum (negative) flux (S_min) recorded on the image (typically |S_min| is of the order of 0.5 mJy, corresponding to the value at which we have stopped the cleaning) and the noise level. This has been evaluated either as the FWHM of the Gaussian fit to the flux distribution of the pixels (in the range +/-S_min), in order to check for correlated noise (sigma_fit), or as the standard deviation of the average flux in several source-free sub-regions of the mosaics, in order to verify uniformity (<sigma>).
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/476/2717
- Title:
- AT20G-MWACS catalogue
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/476/2717
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We present a new broad-band radio frequency catalogue across 0.12GHz<={nu}<=20GHz created by combining data from the Murchison Widefield Array Commissioning Survey, the Australia Telescope 20GHz survey, and the literature. Our catalogue consists of 1285 sources limited by S_20GHz_>40mJy at 5{sigma}, and contains flux density measurements (or estimates) and uncertainties at 0.074, 0.080, 0.119, 0.150, 0.180, 0.408, 0.843, 1.4, 4.8, 8.6, and 20GHz. We fit a second-order polynomial in log-log space to the spectral energy distributions of all these sources in order to characterize their broad-band emission. For the 994 sources that are well described by a linear or quadratic model we present a new diagnostic plot arranging sources by the linear and curvature terms. We demonstrate the advantages of such a plot over the traditional radio colour-colour diagram. We also present astrophysical descriptions of the sources found in each segment of this new parameter space and discuss the utility of these plots in the upcoming era of large area, deep, broad-band radio surveys.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/417/2651
- Title:
- AT20G-optical catalogue
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/417/2651
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- Our current understanding of radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGN) comes predominantly from studies at frequencies of 5GHz and below. With the recent completion of the Australia Telescope 20GHz (AT20G) survey, we can now gain insight into the high-frequency radio properties of AGN. This paper presents supplementary information on the AT20G sources in the form of optical counterparts and redshifts. Optical counterparts were identified using the SuperCOSMOS data base and redshifts were found from either the 6dF Galaxy Survey or the literature. We also report 144 new redshifts. For AT20G sources outside the Galactic plane, 78.5% have optical identifications and 30.9% have redshift information. The optical identification rate also increases with increasing flux density. Targets which had optical spectra available were examined to obtain a spectral classification.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/A+A/611/A28
- Title:
- ATLAS3D H{alpha} imaging of early-type galaxies
- Short Name:
- J/A+A/611/A28
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The traditional knowledge of the mechanisms that caused the formation and evolution of early-type galaxies (ETG) in a hierarchical universe was challenged by the unexpected finding by ATLAS^3D^ that 86% of the ETGs show signs of a fast-rotating disk at their interior. This implies a common origin of most spiral galaxies, followed by a quenching phase, while only a minority of the most massive systems are slow rotators and were likely to be the products of merger events. Our aim is to improve our knowledge on the content and distribution of ionized hydrogen and their usage to form stars in a representative sample of ETGs for which the kinematics and detailed morphological classification were known from ATLAS^3D^. Methods. Using narrow-band filters centered on the redshifted H{alpha} line along with a broad-band (r-Gunn) filter to recover the stellar continuum, we observed or collected existing imaging observations for 147 ETGs (including members of the Virgo cluster) that are representative of the whole ATLAS3D survey. Fifty-five ETGs (37%) were detected in the H{alpha} line above our detection threshold, (EW(H{alpha})<=-1{AA}), and 21 harbor a strong source (EW(H{alpha})<=-5{AA}). The strong H{alpha} emitters appear associated with mostly low-mass (M*~10^10^M_{sun}_) S0 galaxies that contain conspicuous stellar and gaseous discs. These harbor significant star formation at their interior, including their nuclei. The weak H{alpha} emitters are almost one order of magnitude more massive, contain gas-poor discs and harbor an AGN at their centers. Their emissivity is dominated by [NII] and does not imply star formation. The 92 undetected ETGs constitute the majority in our sample and are gas-free systems that lack a disc and exhibit passive spectra even in their nuclei. These pieces of evidence reinforce the conclusion made previously that the evolution of ETGs followed the secular channel for the less massive systems and the dry merging channel for the most massive galaxies at the center of clusters of galaxies.
236. ATLAS3D project. I.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/413/813
- Title:
- ATLAS3D project. I.
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/413/813
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- The ATLAS^3D^ project is a multiwavelength survey combined with a theoretical modelling effort. The observations span from the radio to the millimetre and optical, and provide multicolour imaging, two-dimensional kinematics of the atomic (HI), molecular (CO) and ionized gas (H{beta}, [OIII] and [NI]), together with the kinematics and population of the stars (H{beta}, Fe5015 and Mgb), for a carefully selected, volume-limited (1.16x10^5^Mpc^3^) sample of 260 early-type (elliptical E and lenticular S0) galaxies (ETGs). The models include semi-analytic, N-body binary mergers and cosmological simulations of galaxy formation. Here we present the science goals for the project and introduce the galaxy sample and the selection criteria. The sample consists of nearby (D<42Mpc, |DE-29{deg}|<35{deg}, |b|>15{deg}) morphologically selected ETGs extracted from a parent sample of 871 galaxies (8 per cent E, 22 per cent S0 and 70 per cent spirals) brighter than M_K_<-21.5mag (stellar mass M_*_>~6x10^9^M_{sun}_).
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/414/888
- Title:
- ATLAS3D project. III.
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/414/888
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We provide a census of the apparent stellar angular momentum within one effective radius of a volume-limited sample of 260 early-type galaxies (ETGs) in the nearby Universe, using the integral-field spectroscopy obtained in the course of the ATLAS3D project. We exploit the {lambda}_R_ parameter (previously used via a constant threshold value of 0.1) to characterize the existence of two families of ETGs: slow rotators which exhibit complex stellar velocity fields and often include stellar kinematically distinct cores, and fast rotators which have regular velocity fields. Our complete sample of 260 ETGs leads to a new criterion to disentangle fast and slow rotators which now includes a dependency on the apparent ellipticity {epsilon}.
238. ATLAS3D project. IV.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/414/940
- Title:
- ATLAS3D project. IV.
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/414/940
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We have carried out a survey for CO J=1-0 and J=2-1 emission in the 260 early-type galaxies of the volume-limited ATLAS3D sample, with the goal of connecting their star formation and assembly histories to their cold gas content. This is the largest volume-limited CO survey of its kind and is the first to include many Virgo cluster members. Sample members are dynamically hot galaxies with a median stellar mass ~3x10^10^M_{sun}_; they are selected by their morphology rather than colour, and the bulk of them lie on the red sequence. The overall CO detection rate is 56/259=0.22+/-0.03, with no dependence on the K luminosity and only a modest dependence on the dynamical mass. There are a dozen CO detections among the Virgo cluster members; statistical analysis of their H_2_ mass distributions and their dynamical status within the cluster shows that the cluster's influence on their molecular masses is subtle at best, even though (unlike spirals) they seem to be virialized within the cluster. We suggest that the cluster members have retained their molecular gas through several Gyr residences in the cluster.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/416/1680
- Title:
- ATLAS3D project. VII.
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/416/1680
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- In Paper I of this series we introduced a volume-limited parent sample of 871 galaxies from which we extracted the ATLAS3D sample of 260 early-type galaxies (ETGs). In Papers II and III we classified the ETGs using their stellar kinematics, in a way that is nearly insensitive to the projection effects, and we separated them into fast and slow rotators. Here we look at galaxy morphology and note that the edge-on fast rotators generally are lenticular galaxies.
- ID:
- ivo://CDS.VizieR/J/MNRAS/433/2812
- Title:
- ATLAS3D project. XXIII.
- Short Name:
- J/MNRAS/433/2812
- Date:
- 21 Oct 2021
- Publisher:
- CDS
- Description:
- We investigate nuclear light profiles in 135 ATLAS3D galaxies for which the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) imaging is available and compare them to the large-scale kinematics obtained with the SAURON integral-field spectrograph. Specific angular momentum, {lambda}_R_, correlates with the shape of nuclear light profiles, where, as suggested by previous studies, cores are typically found in slow rotators and core-less galaxies are fast rotators. As also shown before, cores are found only in massive galaxies and only in systems with the stellar mass (measured via dynamical models) M>~8x10^10^M_{sun}_. Based on our sample, we, however, see no evidence for a bimodal distribution of nuclear slopes. The best predictor for finding a core is based on the stellar velocity dispersion within an effective radius, {sigma}_e_, and specific angular momentum, where cores are found for {lambda}_R<~0.25 and {sigma}_e_>~160km/s. We estimate that only about 10percent of nearby early-type galaxies contain cores. Furthermore, we show that there is a genuine population of fast rotators with cores. We also show that core fast rotators are morphologically, kinematically and dynamically different from core slow rotators. The cores of fast rotators, however, could harbour black holes of similar masses to those in core slow rotators, but typically more massive than those found in core-less fast rotators. Cores of both fast and slow rotators are made of old stars and found in galaxies typically lacking molecular or atomic gas (with a few exceptions). Core-less galaxies, and especially core-less fast rotators, are underluminous in the diffuse X-ray emission, but the presence of a core does not imply high X-ray luminosities. Additionally, we postulate (as many of these galaxies lack HST imaging) a possible population of core-less galaxies among slow rotators, which cannot be explained as face-on discs, but comprise a genuine sub-population of slow rotators. These galaxies are typically less massive and flatter than core slow rotators, and show evidence for dynamical cold structures and exponential photometric components. Based on our findings, major non-dissipative (gas-poor) mergers together with black hole binary evolution may not be the only path for formation of cores in early-type galaxies. We discuss possible processes for formation of cores and their subsequent preservation.