Studying the radio continuum from nuclear activity and star formation in Giant Low Surface Brightness Galaxies
Alka Mishra, N. G. Kantharia, M. Das, D. C. Srivastava, S. N. Vogel

TL;DR
This study uses multifrequency radio observations to analyze nuclear activity and star formation in seven giant low surface brightness galaxies, revealing diverse emission properties and environmental influences.
Contribution
First comprehensive radio continuum analysis of GLSB galaxies highlighting nuclear activity, star formation rates, and environmental effects.
Findings
Radio emission detected from all galaxy nuclei.
Diverse spectral indices indicating core-dominated and steeper spectrum sources.
Radio lobes associated with AGN in UGC 6614.
Abstract
We present a multifrequency radio continuum study of seven giant low surface brightness (GLSB) galaxies using the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope (GMRT). GLSB galaxies are optically faint, dark-matter dominated systems that are poorly evolved and have large HI gas disks. Our sample consists of GLSB galaxies that show signatures of nuclear activity in their optical spectra. We detect radio emission from the nuclei of all the seven galaxies. Five galaxies have nuclear spectral indices that range from 0.12 to -0.44 and appear to be core-dominated; the two galaxies have a steeper spectrum. Two of the galaxies, UGC 2936 and UGC 4422 show significant radio emission from their disks. In our 610 MHz observations of UGC 6614, we detect radio lobes associated with the radio-loud active galactic nucleus (AGN). The lobes have a spectral index of -1.06+/-0.12. The star formation rates estimated from…
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