COLDz: Deep 34 GHz Continuum Observations and Free-free Emission in High-redshift Star-forming Galaxies
H.S.B. Algera, J.A. Hodge, D. Riechers, E.J. Murphy, R. Pavesi, M., Aravena, E. Daddi, R. Decarli, M. Dickinson, M. Sargent, C.E. Sharon, J. Wagg

TL;DR
This paper presents deep 34 GHz radio observations of high-redshift star-forming galaxies, revealing free-free emission as a direct tracer of star formation, and provides new insights into their radio spectra and star-formation rates.
Contribution
It offers the deepest 34 GHz radio counts to date, decomposes galaxy spectra into thermal and synchrotron components, and constrains high-redshift star-formation using free-free emission.
Findings
Detected 34 GHz emission in several high-redshift galaxies.
Decomposed spectra into thermal and synchrotron components.
Found free-free SFRs consistent with other indicators.
Abstract
The high-frequency radio sky has historically remained largely unexplored due to the typical faintness of sources in this regime, and the modest survey speed compared to observations at lower frequencies. However, high-frequency radio surveys present an invaluable tracer of high-redshift star-formation, as they directly target the faint radio free-free emission. We present deep continuum observations at 34 GHz in the COSMOS and GOODS-North fields from the Karl G. Jansky Very Large Array (VLA), as part of the COLDz survey. The deep COSMOS mosaic spans down to , while the wider GOODS-N observations cover to . We present the deepest 34 GHz radio number counts to date, with five and thirteen continuum detections in COSMOS and GOODS-N, respectively. Nine galaxies show 34 GHz…
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