The LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey Deep fields: A new analysis of low-frequency radio luminosity as a star-formation tracer in the Lockman Hole region
M. Bonato, I. Prandoni, G. De Zotti, P. N. Best, M. Bondi, G. Calistro, Rivera, R. K. Cochrane, G. G\"urkan, P. Haskell, R. Kondapally, M., Magliocchetti, S. K. Leslie, K. Malek, H. J. A. R\"ottgering, D. J. B. Smith,, C. Tasse, L. Wang

TL;DR
This study uses LOFAR deep observations at 150 MHz to analyze the relation between radio luminosity and star formation rates in galaxies, revealing spectral flattening, weak redshift evolution, and providing luminosity functions for star-forming galaxies and AGN.
Contribution
It offers a new analysis of low-frequency radio luminosity as a star-formation tracer, including spectral behavior, evolution, and luminosity functions, based on deep LOFAR data and multi-method SED classifications.
Findings
Spectral flattening below 1.4 GHz in some sources.
Weak redshift evolution of $L_{150 \rm MHz}/\mathrm{SFR}$ ratio.
Luminosity functions consistent with simulations and previous estimates.
Abstract
We have exploited LOFAR deep observations of the Lockman Hole field at 150 MHz to investigate the relation between the radio luminosity of star-forming galaxies (SFGs) and their star formation rates (SFRs), as well as its dependence on stellar mass and redshift. The adopted source classification, SFRs and stellar masses are consensus estimates based on a combination of four different SED fitting methods. We note a flattening of radio spectra of a substantial minority of sources below GHz. Such sources have thus a lower "radio-loudness" level at 150 MHz than expected from extrapolations from 1.4 GHz using the average spectral index. We found a weak trend towards a lower ratio for higher stellar mass, . We argue that such a trend may account for most of the apparent redshift evolution of the ratio, in line with…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
