Radio Detection of Radio-Quiet Galaxies
J. A. Hodge, R. H. Becker, R. L. White, W. H. de Vries

TL;DR
This study uses median stacking of radio images to analyze the faint radio emission of ~185,000 quiescent galaxies from SDSS, revealing insights into their star formation and AGN activity.
Contribution
It introduces a method to measure radio emission in quiescent galaxies and compares radio-derived SFRs with optical/UV estimates, highlighting AGN influence.
Findings
Radio stacking reaches flux densities of tens of microJy.
Radio-derived SFRs conflict with UV estimates, suggesting AGN contamination.
Radio luminosity in LRGs is independent of SFR, indicating dominant AGN activity.
Abstract
We investigate the radio emission of ~185,000 quiescent (optically unclassifiable) galaxies selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). By median-stacking FIRST cutouts centered on the optically-selected sources, we are able to reach flux densities down to the 10s of microJy. The quiescent galaxy sample is composed of two subgroups inhabiting vastly different regimes: those targeted for the SDSS MAIN Galaxy Sample (~55%), and those targeted for the Luminous Red Galaxy (LRG) sample (~45%). To investigate the star-formation rates (SFRs) of these quiescent galaxies, we calibrate a radio-SFR conversion using a third sample of star-forming galaxies. Comparing this SFR-indicator with indicators in the optical and UV, we derive conflicting SFR estimates for the MAIN sample quiescent galaxies. These radio-derived SFRs intersect those calculated using the 4000-Angstrom break (D4000)…
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