Sub-arcsecond imaging with the International LOFAR Telescope: II. Completion of the LOFAR Long-Baseline Calibrator Survey
Neal Jackson, Shruti Badole, John Morgan, Rajan Chhetri, Kaspars, Prusis, Atvars Nikolajevs, Leah Morabito, Michiel Brentjens, Frits Sweijen,, Marco Iacobelli, Emanuela Orr\`u, J. Sluman, R. Blaauw, H. Mulder, P. van, Dijk, Sean Mooney, Adam Deller, Javier Moldon

TL;DR
The LOFAR Long-Baseline Calibrator Survey (LBCS) provides a comprehensive catalog of over 24,700 sources suitable for calibration of long-baseline interferometry, enabling improved high-resolution radio imaging and source structure analysis.
Contribution
This paper completes the LBCS, offering the first extensive catalog of calibrators across the northern sky for LOFAR, with new flux density scaling and structure assessment methods.
Findings
Approximately one calibrator per square degree identified.
Higher incidence of compact flux in quasars compared to radio galaxies.
Consistent detection patterns between LOFAR and IPS studies.
Abstract
The Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) Long-Baseline Calibrator Survey (LBCS) was conducted between 2014 and 2019 in order to obtain a set of suitable calibrators for the LOFAR array. In this paper we present the complete survey, building on the preliminary analysis published in 2016 which covered approximately half the survey area. The final catalogue consists of 30006 observations of 24713 sources in the northern sky, selected for a combination of high low-frequency radio flux density and flat spectral index using existing surveys (WENSS, NVSS, VLSS, and MSSS). Approximately one calibrator per square degree, suitable for calibration of 200 km baselines is identified by the detection of compact flux density, for declinations north of 30 degrees and away from the Galactic plane, with a considerably lower density south of this point due to relative difficulty in selecting flat-spectrum…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
