The host galaxies of micro-Jansky radio sources
K.M. Luchsinger (1,2), M. Lacy (2), K.M. Jones (3), J.C. Mauduit (4),, J. Pforr (5), J.A. Surace (4), M. Vaccari (6,7), D. Farrah (8), E., Gonzales-Solares (9), M.J. Jarvis (6,10), C. Maraston (11), L. Marchetti, (12), S. Oliver (13), J. Afonso (14,15), D. Cappozi (11)

TL;DR
This study combines deep radio, infrared, and optical data to analyze the host galaxies of micro-Jansky radio sources, revealing diverse galaxy populations and their potential role in galaxy evolution through radio-mode feedback.
Contribution
It provides the largest multi-wavelength analysis of faint radio source hosts, classifies their nature, and examines their evolution and feedback implications up to redshift 2.
Findings
Majority of radio sources identified in infrared with photometric redshifts.
Mixed population of star-forming galaxies and AGN with different accretion modes.
Radio-loud fraction up to 30% in massive galaxies at z~2.
Abstract
We combine a deep 0.5~deg, 1.4~GHz deep radio survey in the Lockman Hole with infrared and optical data in the same field, including the SERVS and UKIDSS near-infrared surveys, to make the largest study to date of the host galaxies of radio sources with typical radio flux densities Jy. 87% (1274/1467) of radio sources have identifications in SERVS to at 3.6 or 4.5m, and 9% are blended with bright objects (mostly stars), leaving only 4% (59 objects) which are too faint to confidently identify in the near-infrared. We are able to estimate photometric redshifts for 68% of the radio sources. We use mid-infrared diagnostics to show that the source population consists of a mixture of star forming galaxies, rapidly accreting (cold mode) AGN and low accretion rate, hot mode AGN, with neither AGN nor starforming galaxies clearly dominating. We see the…
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