The 1.28 GHz MeerKAT DEEP2 Image
T. Mauch (1), W. D. Cotton (2,1), J. J. Condon (2), A. M. Matthews, (3,2), T. D. Abbott (1), R. M. Adam (1), M. A. Aldera (4), K. M. B. Asad, (1,5,6), E. F. Bauermeister (1), T. G. H. Bennett (1), H. Bester (1), D. H., Botha (7), L. R. S. Brederode (1), Z. B. Brits (1)

TL;DR
This paper presents a deep 1.28 GHz MeerKAT radio image with unprecedented sensitivity, revealing the majority of star-forming galaxies contributing to the cosmic radio background and providing new insights into the universe's star formation history.
Contribution
It introduces the new 64-element MeerKAT array, details commissioning observations, and extends the 1.4 GHz source count to unprecedented depths, linking radio observations to star formation history.
Findings
Most faint sources are distant star-forming galaxies obeying FIR/radio correlation.
Sources stronger than 0.25 μJy account for ~93% of the radio background.
The observed source count challenges existing luminosity evolution models.
Abstract
We present the confusion-limited 1.28 GHz MeerKAT DEEP2 image covering one FWHM primary beam area with FWHM resolution and Jy/beam rms noise. Its J2000 center position , was selected to minimize artifacts caused by bright sources. We introduce the new 64-element MeerKAT array and describe commissioning observations to measure the primary beam attenuation pattern, estimate telescope pointing errors, and pinpoint coordinate errors caused by offsets in frequency or time. We constructed a 1.4 GHz differential source count by combining a power-law count fit to the DEEP2 confusion distribution from to Jy with counts of individual DEEP2 sources between Jy and mJy. Most sources fainter than Jy are distant star-forming galaxies obeying…
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