The VLA-COSMOS 3 GHz Large Project: Average radio spectral energy distribution of active galactic nuclei
Kre\v{s}imir Tisani\'c, V. Smol\v{c}i\'c, M. Imbri\v{s}ak, M. Bondi,, G. Zamorani, L. Ceraj, E. Vardoulaki, J. Delhaize

TL;DR
This study constructs the average radio spectral energy distribution of radio-excess AGN up to redshift 4, revealing a broken power-law shape with spectral indices that vary with luminosity and redshift, informing future SKA observations.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed average radio SED of RxAGN across a wide redshift range, highlighting spectral shape deviations from simple power laws and their dependence on luminosity and redshift.
Findings
RxAGN have a broken power-law SED with a break at ~4.1 GHz.
Spectral indices increase with source size and redshift.
Simple power-law models underestimate spectral complexity.
Abstract
As the SKA is expected to be operational in the next decade, investigations of the radio sky in the range of 100 MHz to 10 GHz have become important for simulations of the SKA observations. In determining physical properties of galaxies from radio data, the radio SED is often assumed to be described by a simple power law, usually with a spectral index of 0.7 for all sources. Even though radio SEDs have been shown to exhibit deviations from this assumption, both in differing spectral indices and complex spectral shapes, it is often presumed that their individual differences cancel out in large samples. We constructed the average radio SED of radio-excess active galactic nuclei (RxAGN), defined as those that exhibit a 3 radio luminosity excess with respect to the value expected only from contribution from star formation, out to z~4. We combined VLA observations of the COSMOS…
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