ATLBS: the Australia Telescope Low-brightness Survey
R. Subrahmanyan, R. D. Ekers, L. Saripalli, E. M. Sadler

TL;DR
The ATLBS survey provides a detailed inventory of diffuse radio emission components at 1388 MHz, revealing insights into the structure and evolution of radio sources and their role in galaxy evolution.
Contribution
This survey offers the first comprehensive low-brightness, high-sensitivity radio imaging of a large sky area, characterizing diffuse emission and source complexity at sub-mJy levels.
Findings
Normalized source counts show no upturn down to 0.6 mJy.
Fractional polarization increases with decreasing flux density.
Transition from FR-II to FR-I morphology observed at lower flux densities.
Abstract
We present a radio survey carried out with the Australia Telescope Compact Array. A motivation for the survey was to make a complete inventory of the diffuse emission components as a step towards a study of the cosmic evolution in radio source structure and the contribution from radio-mode feedback on galaxy evolution. The Australia Telescope low-brightness survey (ATLBS) at 1388 MHz covers 8.42 sq deg of the sky in an observing mode designed to yield images with exceptional surface brightness sensitivity and low confusion. The ATLBS radio images, made with 0.08 mJy/beam rms noise and 50" beam, detect a total of 1094 sources with peak flux exceeding 0.4 mJy/beam. The ATLBS source counts were corrected for blending, noise bias, resolution, and primary beam attenuation; the normalized differential source counts are consistent with no upturn down to 0.6 mJy. The percentage integrated…
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