First results from the ATCA 18 GHz pilot survey
R. Ricci (1,2), E. M. Sadler (3), R. D. Ekers (1), L. Staveley-Smith, (1), W. E. Wilson (1), M. J. Kesteven (1), R. Subrahmanyan (1), M. A. Walker, (1,3), C. A. Jackson (1), G. De Zotti (4,2), ((1) ATNF, (2) SISSA, (3) Sydney, University, (4) Padua Observatory)

TL;DR
This pilot survey at 18 GHz using ATCA provides initial all-sky radio source data, revealing source counts, spectral properties, and optical identifications, demonstrating the feasibility of short-wavelength radio surveys.
Contribution
First all-sky 18 GHz radio survey using a novel wide-band correlator, providing initial source counts, spectral analysis, and optical identifications in the southern sky.
Findings
Detected 221 sources with 70% completeness at 126 mJy
Most sources have flat or inverted spectra, indicating active galactic nuclei
High optical identification rate with many sources as QSOs or galaxies
Abstract
As a pilot study for the first all-sky radio survey at short wavelengths, we have observed 1216 sq. deg. of the southern sky at 18GHz (16mm) using a novel wide-band (3.4GHz bandwidth) analogue correlator on one baseline of the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA). We scanned a region of sky between declination -71 and -59 degrees with an rms noise level of 15mJy. Follow-up radio imaging of candidate sources above a 4 sigma detection limit of 60mJy resulted in 221 confirmed detections, for which we have measured accurate positions and flux densities. For extragalactic sources, the survey is roughly 70% complete at a flux density of 126mJy and 95% complete above 300mJy. Almost half the detected sources lie within a few degrees of the Galactic plane, but there are 123 sources with |b|>5 degrees which can be assumed to be extragalactic. The differential source counts for extragalactic…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology
