Mining the Herschel-ATLAS: submillimeter-selected blazars in equatorial fields
M. L\'opez-Caniego, J. Gonz\'alez-Nuevo, M. Massardi, L. Bonavera, D., Herranz, M. Negrello, G. De Zotti, F. J. Carrera, L. Danese, S. Fleuren, M., Hardcastle, M. J. Jarvis, H.-R. Kl\"ockner, T. Mauch, P. Procopio, S., Righini, W. Sutherland, R. Auld, M. Baes, S. Buttiglione

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel-ATLAS data to identify and analyze submillimeter-selected blazars, revealing their diverse host galaxy types and providing new insights into blazar properties and evolution.
Contribution
It introduces new diagnostic diagrams for blazar identification in sub-mm surveys and demonstrates that many blazars are hosted by star-forming galaxies, challenging previous assumptions.
Findings
Identified 8 known blazars and 12 new candidates in the H-ATLAS fields.
Found that many blazars are hosted by star-forming galaxies, not passive ellipticals.
Estimated about 11 blazars with S500μm > 35mJy in the surveyed area.
Abstract
The Herschel Astrophysical Terahertz Large Area Survey (H-ATLAS) provides an unprecedented opportunity to search for blazars at sub-mm wavelengths. We cross-matched the FIRST radio source catalogue with the 11655 sources brighter than 35 mJy at 500{\mu}m in the \sim 135 square degrees of the sky covered by the H-ATLAS equatorial fields at 9 h and 15 h, plus half of the field at 12 h. We found that 379 of the H-ATLAS sources have a FIRST counterpart within 10 arcsec, including 8 catalogued blazars (plus one known blazar that was found at the edge of one the H-ATLAS maps). To search for additional blazar candidates we have devised new diagnostic diagrams and found that known blazars occupy a region of the log(S500{\mu}m/S350{\mu}m) vs. log(S500{\mu}m/S1.4GHz) plane separated from that of the other sub-mm sources with radio counterparts. Using this diagnostic we have selected 12 further…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Neutrino Physics Research
