Using VO tools to investigate distant radio starbursts hosting obscured AGN in the HDF(N) region
A. M. S. Richards (1), T. W. B. Muxlow (1), R. Beswick (1), M. G., Allen (2), K. Benson (3), R. C. Dickson (1), M. A. Garrett (4), S. T., Garrington (1), E. Gonzalez-Solarez (5), P. A. Harrison (6), A. J. Holloway, (1), M. M. Kettenis (4), R. A. Laing (6), E. A. Richards (7)

TL;DR
This study uses VO tools to analyze radio and X-ray data in the HDF(N) region, revealing that most high-redshift starbursts host obscured AGN, with star formation and AGN activity being closely linked but triggered differently than at lower redshifts.
Contribution
It extends VO methods to investigate the relationship between luminous radio/X-ray emission and obscured AGN in high-redshift galaxies.
Findings
Most high-redshift starbursts host obscured AGN.
Radio and X-ray luminosities are uncorrelated at z>1.3.
Star formation rates are around 1000 Msun/yr in these galaxies.
Abstract
A 10-arcmin field around the HDF(N) contains 92 radio sources >40 uJy, resolved by MERLIN+VLA at 0".2-2".0 resolution. 55 have Chandra X-ray counterparts including 18 with a hard X-ray photon index and high luminosity characteristic of a type-II (obscured) AGN. >70% of the radio sources have been classified as starbursts or AGN using radio morphologies, spectral indices and comparisons with optical appearance and MIR emission. Starbursts outnumber radio AGN 3:1. This study extends the VO methods previously used to identify X-ray-selected obscured type-II AGN to investigate whether very luminous radio and X-ray emission originates from different phenomena in the same galaxy. The high-redshift starbursts have typical sizes of 5--10 kpc and star formation rates of ~1000 Msun/yr. There is no correlation between radio and X-ray luminosities nor spectral indices at z>~1.3. ~70% of both the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomical Observations and Instrumentation · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
