Abstract
The current deepest radio surveys detect hundreds of sources per square degree below 0.1mJy.
There is a growing consensus that a large fraction of these sources are dominated by star formation
although the exact proportion has been debated in the literature. However, the low luminosity of
these galaxies at most other wavelengths makes determining the nature of individual sources
difficult. If future, deeper surveys performed with the next generation of radio instrumentation
are to reap high scientific reward we need to develop reliable methods of distinguishing between
radio emission powered by active galactic nuclei (AGN) and that powered by star formation.
In particular, we believe that such discriminations should be based on purely radio, or relative to
radio, diagnostics. These diagnostics include radiomorphology, radio spectral index, polarisation,
variability, radio luminosity and flux density ratios with non-radio wavelengths e.g. with different
parts of the infrared (IR) regime. We discuss the advantages and limitations of these various
diagnostics methods with current and future surveys. However, weeding AGN out of deep radio
surveys can already provide several insights into the star formation at high redshift. As well as
reproducing the well known rise with redshift in the comoving star formation rate density, we
also see evidence for the continued dominance of LIRGs and ULIRGs to the total star forming
budget across redshifts 1−3. Additionally, while we see that the IR-radio relation for star forming
galaxies does hold to high redshifts (z>1) there is amild deviation depending on the IR waveband
used and the range of IR SEDs found. We will discuss the possible reasons behind this change in
properties.
Panoramic
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | EPRINTS-BOOK-TITLE |
Publisher | University of Groningen |
Number of pages | 6 |
Publication status | Published - 2009 |
Event | Panoramic Radio Astronomy: Wide-field 1-2 GHz research on galaxy evolution June 2-5 2009 Groningen, the Netherklands - Duration: 2-Jun-2009 → 5-Jun-2009 |
Conference
Conference | Panoramic Radio Astronomy: Wide-field 1-2 GHz research on galaxy evolution June 2-5 2009 Groningen, the Netherklands |
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Period | 02/06/2009 → 05/06/2009 |