The LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey IV. First Data Release: Photometric redshifts and rest-frame magnitudes
Kenneth J Duncan, J. Sabater, H. J. A. R\"ottgering, M. J. Jarvis, D., J. B. Smith, P. N. Best, J. R. Callingham, R. Cochrane, J. H. Croston, M. J., Hardcastle, B. Mingo, L. Morabito, D. Nisbet, I. Prandoni, T. W. Shimwell, C., Tasse, G. J. White, W. L. Williams, L. Alegre

TL;DR
This paper presents the first data release of the LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey, providing high-resolution radio observations and photometric redshifts for most optical counterparts, enabling detailed studies of radio source populations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel hybrid photometric redshift methodology optimized for diverse radio-selected sources and provides a large dataset of radio and optical properties with validated redshift estimates.
Findings
Photometric redshifts have a scatter of 3.9% and an outlier fraction of 7.9%.
No strong trend in photo-z quality as a function of radio luminosity at fixed redshift.
Identifies trends in photo-z accuracy as a function of redshift due to selection effects.
Abstract
The LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) is a sensitive, high-resolution 120-168 MHz survey of the Northern sky. The LoTSS First Data Release (DR1) presents 424 square degrees of radio continuum observations over the HETDEX Spring Field (10h45m00s right ascension 15h30m00s and 450000 declination 570000) with a median sensitivity of 71Jy/beam and a resolution of 6. In this paper we present photometric redshifts (photo-) for 94.4% of optical sources over this region that are detected in the Panoramic Survey Telescope and Rapid Response System (Pan-STARRS) 3 steradian survey. Combining the Pan-STARRS optical data with mid-infrared photometry from the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, we estimate photo-s using a novel hybrid photometric redshift methodology optimised to produce the best possible performance for the diverse…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
