Magnetic fields in star-forming galaxies at high and low redshift
Timothy Garn, Dominic Ford, Paul Alexander, David A. Green, Julia M., Riley

TL;DR
This study uses deep multi-wavelength radio and infrared data to examine the relationship between radio luminosity and star formation rates in galaxies up to redshift 1, finding little evidence for magnetic field evolution over this period.
Contribution
It provides the deepest 610-MHz survey to date and combines it with multi-wavelength data to analyze magnetic field evolution in star-forming galaxies.
Findings
Strong correlation between radio luminosity and star formation rate.
No significant evolution in galaxy magnetic fields since z ~ 1.
Radio-infrared relationship is slightly non-linear.
Abstract
As part of an ongoing series of deep GMRT surveys we have observed the Spitzer extragalactic First Look Survey field, producing the deepest wide-field 610-MHz survey published to date. We reach an rms noise of 30 microJy/beam before primary beam correction, with a resolution of ~6 arcsec over an area of ~4 square degrees. By combining these observations with the existing 1.4-GHz VLA survey produced by Condon et al. (2003), along with infrared data in up to seven wavebands from the Spitzer Space Telescope, optical photometry from SDSS and a range of spectroscopic redshift surveys, we are able to study the relationship between radio luminosity and star formation rate in star-forming galaxies up to z ~ 1. The large amount of multi-wavelength data available allows accurate k-corrections to be performed in the radio due to the knowledge of the radio spectral index, and in the infrared…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
