The MeerKAT Massive Distant Clusters Survey: a search for diffuse radio emission in 30 massive SZ-selected clusters at $z > 1$
Dakalo G. Phuravhathu, M. Hilton, S. P. Sikhosana, D. Y. Klutse, K. Knowles, J. van Marrewijk, K. Moodley, T. Mroczkowski, N. Oozeer, B. Partridge, Y. C. Perrott, C. Sif\'on, U. Sureshkumar

TL;DR
This study uses MeerKAT observations to search for diffuse radio emission in 30 high-redshift galaxy clusters, providing new insights into the evolution of cluster-scale radio halos beyond redshift 1.
Contribution
First statistical analysis of diffuse radio emission in massive SZ-selected clusters at z > 1, revealing a lower but significant halo occurrence rate compared to lower redshifts.
Findings
Diffuse radio halos detected in 27% of clusters.
Halo detection rate is lower than at intermediate redshift but higher than some models predict.
No radio relics or mini-halos found in the sample.
Abstract
We present the results of a search for diffuse radio emission in a uniformly selected sample of 30 of the most massive Sunyaev-Zel'dovich selected galaxy clusters at , providing the first statistical constraints on the evolution of cluster-scale diffuse emission beyond this redshift. We also analyse the scaling relations between radio power () and cluster mass () in this high-redshift sample. It is well established that radio halos are primarily found in the most massive clusters, where turbulent energy from major mergers can re-accelerate relativistic electrons and amplify magnetic fields on megaparsec scales. Deep MeerKAT 1.28 GHz observations reveal diffuse radio halos in eight clusters (27), while the remaining 21 (70) show no emission; one additional cluster (3) was excluded from the radio analysis due to poor data quality.…
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