Radio imaging of the Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field - III. Evolution of the radio luminosity function beyond z=1
Chris Simpson, Steve Rawlings, Rob Ivision, Masayuki Akiyama, Omar, Almaini, Emma Bradshaw, Scott Chapman, Rob Chuter, Scott Croom, Jim Dunlop,, Sebastien Foucaud, Will Hartley

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of the radio luminosity function beyond redshift 1 using spectroscopic and photometric redshifts, revealing different evolutionary patterns for radio-loud and radio-quiet galaxies and implications for black hole spin and galaxy growth.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the evolution of radio sources beyond redshift 1, distinguishing between radio-loud and radio-quiet populations and their different evolutionary behaviors.
Findings
Radio source space density increases up to z~2
Radio-quiet sources evolve strongly to z~2
Radio-loud AGNs show modest evolution and decline at z>1
Abstract
We present spectroscopic and eleven-band photometric redshifts for galaxies in the 100-uJy Subaru/XMM-Newton Deep Field radio source sample. We find good agreement between our redshift distribution and that predicted by the SKA Simulated Skies project. We find no correlation between K-band magnitude and radio flux, but show that sources with 1.4-GHz flux densities below ~1mJy are fainter in the near-infrared than brighter radio sources at the same redshift, and we discuss the implications of this result for spectroscopically-incomplete samples where the K-z relation has been used to estimate redshifts. We use the infrared--radio correlation to separate our sample into radio-loud and radio-quiet objects and show that only radio-loud hosts have spectral energy distributions consistent with predominantly old stellar populations, although the fraction of objects displaying such properties…
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