The Last of FIRST: The Final Catalog and Source Identifications
David J. Helfand, Richard L. White, Robert H. Becker

TL;DR
This paper presents the final catalog of the FIRST radio survey, evaluates its accuracy and reliability, compares it with other surveys, and discusses implications for future radio sky observations.
Contribution
It provides the authoritative final catalog of the FIRST survey, assesses its astrometry and flux accuracy, and analyzes radio source populations across flux densities.
Findings
Less than 10% of catalogued objects are likely sidelobes.
Good consistency in flux scale and astrometry with NRAO VLA Sky Survey.
Different behaviors observed in radio matches to stellar objects and galaxies.
Abstract
The FIRST survey, begun over twenty years ago, provides the definitive high-resolution map of the radio sky. This VLA survey reaches a 20cm detection sensitivity of 1 mJy over 10,575 deg**2 largely coincident with the SDSS area. Images and a catalog containing 946,432 sources are available through the FIRST web site (http://sundog.stsci.edu). We record here the authoritative survey history, including hardware and software changes that affect the catalog's reliability and completeness. We use recent JVLA observations to test the survey astrometry and flux bias/scale. Our sidelobe-flagging algorithm finds that fewer than 10% of the catalogued objects are likely sidelobes; these are faint sources concentrated near bright sources, as expected. A match with the NRAO VLA Sky Survey shows very good consistency in flux scale and astrometry. Matches with 2MASS and SDSS indicate a systematic…
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