Continuum sources from the THOR survey between 1 and 2 GHz
S. Bihr, K.G. Johnston, H. Beuther, L.D. Anderson, J. Ott, M. Rugel,, F. Bigiel, A. Brunthaler, S.C.O. Glover, T. Henning, M.H. Heyer, R.S., Klessen, H. Linz, S.N. Longmore, N.M. McClure-Griffiths, K.M. Menten, R., Plume, T. Schierhuber, R. Shanahan, J.M. Stil, J.S. Urquhart

TL;DR
The THOR survey cataloged approximately 4400 radio continuum sources in the Milky Way's first quadrant, providing spectral indices to distinguish thermal and non-thermal sources, and identifying four new supernova remnant candidates.
Contribution
This study presents a comprehensive catalog of continuum sources with spectral index analysis, enabling improved classification of Galactic and extragalactic radio sources.
Findings
Approximately 4400 sources cataloged with spectral index data.
Identification of four new supernova remnant candidates based on spectral analysis.
Clear distinction between thermal and non-thermal emission sources.
Abstract
We carried out a large program with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA): "THOR: The HI, OH, Recombination line survey of the Milky Way". We observed a significant portion of the Galactic plane in the first quadrant of the Milky Way in the 21cm HI line, 4 OH transitions, 19 radio recombination lines, and continuum from 1 to 2 GHz. In this paper we present a catalog of the continuum sources in the first half of the survey (l=14.0-37.9deg and l=47.1-51.2deg, |b|<1.1deg) at a spatial resolution of 10-25", with a spatially varying noise level of ~0.3-1 mJy/beam. The catalog contains ~4400 sources. Around 1200 of these are spatially resolved, and ~1000 are possible artifacts, given their low signal-to-noise ratios. Since the spatial distribution of the unresolved objects is evenly distributed and not confined to the Galactic plane, most of them are extragalactic. Thanks to the broad…
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