A deep 1.4 GHz survey of the J1030 equatorial field: a new window on radio source populations across cosmic time
Q. D'Amato, I. Prandoni, R. Gilli, C. Vignali, M. Massardi, E. Liuzzo,, P. Jagannathan, M. Brienza, R. Paladino, M. Mignoli, S. Marchesi, A. Peca, M., Chiaberge, G. Mazzolari, C. Norman

TL;DR
This deep 1.4 GHz radio survey of the J1030 field reveals new insights into radio source populations, including the first radio detection of a high-redshift quasar, and explores the relationship between radio and X-ray emissions across cosmic time.
Contribution
The paper provides the deepest radio source counts to date, first radio detection of a z>6 quasar, and analyzes the radio-X-ray luminosity relation for diverse extragalactic objects.
Findings
Detected the first radio emission from a z>6 quasar.
Unveiled extended radio lobes associated with a potential protocluster.
Found linear correlations between radio and X-ray luminosities for AGN and ETG.
Abstract
We present deep L-Band observations of the equatorial field centered on the z=6.3 SDSS QSO, reaching a 1 sigma sensitivity of ~2.5 uJy at the center of the field. We extracted a catalog of 1489 radio sources down to a flux density of ~12.5 uJy (5 sigma) over a field of view of ~ 30' diameter. We derived the source counts accounting for catalog reliability and completeness, and compared them with others available in the literature. Our source counts are among the deepest available so far, and, overall, are consistent with recent counts' determinations and models. We detected for the first time in the radio band the SDSS J1030+0524 QSO (26 +/- 5 uJy). We derived its optical radio loudness R_O = 0.62 +/- 0.12, which makes it the most radio quiet AGN at z >~ 6 discovered so far and detected at radio wavelengths. We unveiled extended diffuse radio emission associated with the lobes of a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
