Back to Search Start Over

Identifying active galactic nuclei via brightness temperature with sub-arcsecond International LOFAR Telescope observations

Authors :
Morabito, Leah K.
Sweijen, F.
Radcliffe, J. F.
Best, P. N.
Kondapally, Rohit
Bondi, Marco
Bonato, Matteo
Duncan, K. J.
Prandoni, Isabella
Shimwell, T. W.
Williams, W. L.
van Weeren, R. J.
Conway, J. E.
Rivera, G. Calistro
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Identifying active galactic nuclei (AGN) and isolating their contribution to a galaxy's energy budget is crucial for studying the co-evolution of AGN and their host galaxies. Brightness temperature ($T_b$) measurements from high-resolution radio observations at GHz frequencies are widely used to identify AGN. Here we investigate using new sub-arcsecond imaging at 144 MHz with the International LOFAR Telescope to identify AGN using $T_b$ in the Lockman Hole field. We use ancillary data to validate the 940 AGN identifications, finding 83 percent of sources have AGN classifications from SED fitting and/or photometric identifications, yielding 160 new AGN identifications. Considering the multi-wavelength classifications, brightness temperature criteria select over half of radio-excess sources, 32 percent of sources classified as radio-quiet AGN, and 20 percent of sources classified as star-forming galaxies. Infrared colour-colour plots and comparison with what we would expect to detect based on peak brightness in 6 arcsec LOFAR maps, imply that the star-forming galaxies and sources at low flux densities have a mixture of star-formation and AGN activity. We separate the radio emission from star-formation and AGN in unresolved, $T_b$-identified AGN with no significant radio excess and find the AGN comprises $0.49\pm 0.16$ of the radio luminosity. Overall the non-radio excess AGN show evidence for having a variety of different radio emission mechanisms, which can provide different pathways for AGN and galaxy co-evolution. This validation of AGN identification using brightness temperature at low frequencies opens the possibility for securely selecting AGN samples where ancillary data is inadequate.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS. 19 pages, 15 figures, 2 tables

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2207.13096
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stac2129