The GLEAMing of the first supermassive black holes: II. A new sample of high-redshift radio galaxy candidates
J. W. Broderick, G. Drouart, N. Seymour, T. J. Galvin, N. Wright, A., Carnero Rosell, R. Chhetri, H. Dannerbauer, S. P. Driver, J. S. Morgan, V. A., Moss, S. Prabu, J. M. Afonso, C. De Breuck, B. H. C. Emonts, T. M. O., Franzen, C. M. Guti\'errez, P. J. Hancock, G. H. Heald

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new sample of high-redshift radio galaxy candidates selected via refined low-frequency radio spectral techniques, including multi-wavelength observations, revealing some of the most distant known radio galaxies and potential candidates beyond redshift 6.
Contribution
It presents a refined selection method for high-redshift radio galaxies using low-frequency radio spectra and multi-wavelength data, expanding the known sample significantly.
Findings
Identified 51 new high-redshift radio galaxy candidates.
Discovered a radio galaxy at redshift 5.55, possibly the second most distant.
Potentially found candidates at redshifts beyond 6.5, near the epoch of reionization.
Abstract
While unobscured and radio-quiet active galactic nuclei are regularly being found at redshifts , their obscured and radio-loud counterparts remain elusive. We build upon our successful pilot study, presenting a new sample of low-frequency-selected candidate high-redshift radio galaxies (HzRGs) over a sky area twenty times larger. We have refined our selection technique, in which we select sources with curved radio spectra between 72-231 MHz from the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky Murchison Widefield Array (GLEAM) survey. In combination with the requirements that our GLEAM-selected HzRG candidates have compact radio morphologies and be undetected in near-infrared -band imaging from the Visible and Infrared Survey Telescope for Astronomy Kilo-degree Infrared Galaxy (VIKING) survey, we find 51 new candidate HzRGs over a sky area of approximately 1200 deg. Our…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
