Evolution of thermal and nonthermal radio continuum emission on kpc scales--Predictions for SKA
M. Ghasemi-Nodehi, Fatemeh S. Tabatabaei, Mark Sargent, Eric J., Murphy, Habib Khosroshahi, Rob Beswick, Anna Bonaldi, Eva Schinnerer

TL;DR
This study simulates the evolution of thermal and nonthermal radio emissions in distant galaxies, predicting SKA's ability to detect and analyze these emissions across different galaxy types and redshifts.
Contribution
It provides new predictions for the structure and evolution of radio continuum emission in galaxies and assesses SKA1-MID survey capabilities for observing these features up to redshift 3.
Findings
Synchrotron spectrum flattens with redshift, causing curvature in mid-radio SEDs.
Observed thermal fraction increases with redshift, especially in less massive galaxies.
SKA1-MID can detect ISM features in galaxies up to z=3, depending on galaxy mass.
Abstract
Resolved maps of the thermal and nonthermal radio continuum (RC) emission of distant galaxies are a powerful tool for understanding the role of the interstellar medium (ISM) in the evolution of galaxies. We simulate the RC surface brightness of present-day star forming galaxies in the past at considering two cases of radio size evolution: (1)~no evolution, and (2)~same evolution as in the optical. We aim to investigate the a)~structure of the thermal and nonthermal emission on kpc scales, b)~evolution of the thermal fraction and synchrotron spectrum at mid-radio frequencies (1-10\,GHz), and c)~capability of the proposed SKA1-MID reference surveys in detecting the RC emitting structures. The synchrotron spectrum flattens with causing curvature in the observed mid-radio SEDs of galaxies at higher . The spectral index reported in recent observational studies…
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.
