The Two-Component Radio Luminosity Function of QSOs: Star Formation and AGN
Amy E. Kimball, Kenneth I. Kellermann, James J. Condon, Zeljko Ivezic,, Richard A. Perley

TL;DR
This study uses new sensitive 6 GHz EVLA observations of SDSS QSOs to reveal that their radio luminosity function is composed of two populations: star formation in hosts and AGN activity, clarifying the radio-loud/quiet distinction.
Contribution
First to utilize nearly complete, volume-limited, sensitive radio data to decompose QSO radio emission into star formation and AGN components.
Findings
Radio luminosity function is a superposition of two populations.
Star formation dominates at the faint end of the RLF.
AGN activity dominates at the bright end of the RLF.
Abstract
Despite decades of study, it remains unclear whether there are distinct radio-loud and radio-quiet populations of quasi-stellar objects (QSOs). Early studies were limited by inhomogeneous QSO samples, inadequate sensitivity to probe the radio-quiet population, and degeneracy between redshift and luminosity for flux-density-limited samples. Our new 6 GHz EVLA observations allow us for the first time to obtain nearly complete (97%) radio detections in a volume-limited color-selected sample of 179 QSOs more luminous than M_i = -23 from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) Data Release Seven in the narrow redshift range 0.2 < z < 0.3. The dramatic improvement in radio continuum sensitivity made possible with the new EVLA allows us, in 35 minutes of integration, to detect sources as faint as 20 microJy, or log[L_6 (W/Hz)] ~ 21.5 at z = 0.25, well below the radio luminosity, log[L_6 (W/Hz)] ~…
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