Radio continuum emission in the northern Galactic plane: Sources and spectral indices from the THOR survey
Y. Wang, S. Bihr, M. Rugel, H. Beuther, K. G. Johnston, J. Ott, J. D., Soler, A. Brunthaler, L. D. Anderson, J. S. Urquhart, R. S. Klessen, H. Linz,, N. M. McClure-Griffiths, S. C. O. Glover, K. M. Menten, F. Bigiel, M. Hoare,, and S. N. Longmore

TL;DR
This paper presents a high-resolution, high-sensitivity radio continuum survey of the northern Galactic plane using the VLA, identifying thousands of sources and their spectral properties to study Galactic and extragalactic objects.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed 21cm continuum survey of a large Galactic plane region with spectral index analysis and cross-matching with multiple catalogs, revealing numerous new sources.
Findings
Detected over 10,900 sources with reliable classification.
Identified 840 HII regions, 52 SNRs, 164 PNe, and 38 pulsars.
Found 699 ultra-steep spectrum sources potentially high-redshift galaxies.
Abstract
Radio continuum surveys of the Galactic plane can find and characterize HII regions, supernova remnants (SNRs), planetary nebulae (PNe), and extragalactic sources. A number of surveys at high angular resolution (<25") at different wavelengths exist to study the interstellar medium (ISM), but no comparable high-resolution and high-sensitivity survey exists at long radio wavelengths around 21cm. We observed a large fraction of the Galactic plane in the first quadrant of the Milky Way (l=14.0-67.4deg and |b| < 1.25deg) with the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA) in the C-configuration covering six continuum spectral windows. These data provide a detailed view on the compact as well as extended radio emission of our Galaxy and thousands of extragalactic background sources. We used the BLOBCAT software and extracted 10916 sources. After removing spurious source detections caused by the…
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