High-energy sources at low radio frequency: the Murchison Widefield Array view of Fermi blazars
M. Giroletti, F. Massaro, R. D'Abrusco, R. Lico, D. Burlon, N., Hurley-Walker, M. Johnston-Hollitt, J. Morgan, V. Pavlidou, M. Bell, G., Bernardi, R. Bhat, J.D. Bowman, F. Briggs, R.J. Cappallo, B.E. Corey, A.A., Deshpande, A. Ewall-Rice, D. Emrich, B.M. Gaensler, R. Goeke

TL;DR
This study uses low-frequency radio data from the Murchison Widefield Array to analyze blazar spectral properties, identify counterparts of gamma-ray sources, and explore their multi-wavelength correlations, revealing new insights into blazar populations.
Contribution
It provides the first characterization of blazar spectra at low radio frequencies and links radio and gamma-ray properties, improving source identification and understanding.
Findings
36% of blazars have low-frequency counterparts
Blazar spectra are flatter at low frequencies than at GHz frequencies
A mild correlation exists between low-frequency radio flux and gamma-ray flux
Abstract
Low-frequency radio arrays are opening a new window for the study of the sky, both to study new phenomena and to better characterize known source classes. Being flat-spectrum sources, blazars are so far poorly studied at low radio frequencies. We characterize the spectral properties of the blazar population at low radio frequency compare the radio and high-energy properties of the gamma-ray blazar population, and search for radio counterparts of unidentified gamma-ray sources. We cross-correlated the 6,100 deg^2 Murchison Widefield Array Commissioning Survey catalogue with the Roma blazar catalogue, the third catalogue of active galactic nuclei detected by Fermi-LAT, and the unidentified members of the entire third catalogue of gamma-ray sources detected by \fermilat. When available, we also added high-frequency radio data from the Australia Telescope 20 GHz catalogue. We find…
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