Sensitive Radio Survey of Obscured Quasar Candidates
Rachael M. Alexandroff, Nadia L. Zakamska, Sjoert van Velzen, Jenny E., Greene, Michael A. Strauss

TL;DR
This study uses deep radio observations to explore the properties of obscured quasars and faint radio sources, revealing their radio activity, morphology, and potential role in galaxy evolution, with implications for understanding the radio-quiet universe.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the radio characteristics of obscured quasars and faint radio sources, highlighting their diversity and the limitations of radio-based selection methods.
Findings
Most z~2.5 obscured quasars are radio-quiet and undetected individually.
Radio emission in z~0.5 quasars shows steep spectral indices and possible jet-driven bubbles.
A significant fraction of faint radio sources are active nuclei, passive galaxies, or IR-bright faint objects.
Abstract
We study the radio properties of moderately obscured quasars over a range of redshifts to understand the role of radio activity in accretion using the Jansky Very Large Array (JVLA) at 6.0GHz and 1.4GHz. Our z~2.5 sample consists of optically-selected obscured quasar candidates, all of which are radio-quiet, with typical radio luminosities of [1.4 GHz] < erg s. Only a single source is individually detected in our deep (rms~10 Jy) exposures. This population would not be identified by radio-based selection methods used for distinguishing dusty star-forming galaxies and obscured active nuclei. In our pilot A-array study of z~0.5 radio-quiet quasars, we spatially resolve four of five objects on scales ~ 5 kpc and find they have steep spectral indices. Therefore, radio emission in these sources could be due to jet-driven or radiatively driven bubbles…
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