The faint source population at 15.7 GHz - III. A high-frequency study of HERGs and LERGs
Imogen H. Whittam, Julia M. Riley, David A. Green, Matt J. Jarvis

TL;DR
This study analyzes a sample of faint radio galaxies at 15.7 GHz, classifying them into HERGs and LERGs, and explores their properties, morphology, and how their populations change with flux density.
Contribution
It provides a detailed high-frequency classification of faint radio galaxies, including the identification of FR0 sources and their spectral properties, expanding understanding of radio galaxy populations.
Findings
HERGs tend to have higher flux densities and flatter spectra than LERGs.
FR0 sources dominate at flux densities below 1 mJy.
Radio galaxy populations shift from quasars to galaxies as flux density decreases.
Abstract
A complete sample of 96 faint ( mJy) radio galaxies is selected from the Tenth Cambridge (10C) survey at 15.7~GHz. Optical spectra are used to classify 17 of the sources as high-excitation or low-excitation radio galaxies (HERGs and LERGs respectively), for the remaining sources three other methods are used; these are optical compactness, X-ray observations and mid-infrared colour--colour diagrams. 32 sources are HERGs and 35 are LERGs while the remaining 29 sources could not be classified. We find that the 10C HERGs tend to have higher 15.7-GHz flux densities, flatter spectra, smaller linear sizes and be found at higher redshifts than the LERGs. This suggests that the 10C HERGs are more core dominated than the LERGs. Lower-frequency radio images, linear sizes and spectral indices are used to classify the sources according to their radio morphology; 18 are Fanaroff and Riley…
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