X-ray and Radio Follow-up Observations of High-Redshift Blazar Candidates in the Fermi-LAT Unassociated Source Population
Y. Takahashi, J. Kataoka, K. Niinuma, M. Honma, Y. Inoue, T. Totani,, S. Inoue, T. Nakamori, K. Maeda

TL;DR
This study uses X-ray and radio follow-up observations to identify and characterize high-redshift blazar candidates among unassociated Fermi-LAT gamma-ray sources, finding evidence for a blazar at z~3-4.
Contribution
First detailed multiwavelength follow-up of high-redshift blazar candidates from Fermi unassociated sources, confirming a potential blazar at z~3-4.
Findings
NVSS J092357+150518 has a steep radio spectrum, unlikely to be a blazar.
NVSS J150229+555204 shows X-ray and radio properties consistent with a blazar at z~3-4.
Detected a compact, flat-spectrum radio source associated with 2FGL J1502.1+5548.
Abstract
We report on the results of X-ray and radio follow-up observations of two GeV gamma-ray sources 2FGL J0923.5+1508 and 2FGL J1502.1+5548, selected as candidates for high-redshift blazars from unassociated sources in the {\it Fermi} Large Area Telescope Second Source Catalog. We utilize the Suzaku satellite and the VLBI Exploration of Radio Astrometry (VERA) telescopes for X-ray and radio observations, respectively. For 2FGL J0923.5+1508, a possible radio counterpart NVSS J092357+150518 is found at 1.4 GHz from an existing catalog, but we do not detect any X-ray emission from it and derive a flux upper limit 1.37 10 erg cm s. Radio observations at 6.7 GHz also result in an upper limit of 19 mJy, implying a steep radio spectrum that is not expected for a blazar. On the other hand, we detect X-rays from NVSS…
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