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Radio sources in the 6dFGS (Mauch, Sadler, Jackson, Saunders, Cannon, Hunstead) ‘Main survey’ science: ~ 15% of 6dFGS galaxies will be detected as radio sources by NVSS/SUMSS (vs <2% in 2dFGRS) i.e. 10,000+ spectra! • Faint end of radio luminosity function for AGN, starbursts • Accurate z=0 benchmarks for studies of cosmic evolution • Black hole mass/velocity dispersion relation for radio AGN ‘Extra targets’ science: • Compact objects and some galaxies with blue colours (QSOs, X-Ray sources, PNe, starburst galaxies…) 31 May 2002 6dF workshop 1 All-sky radio continuum surveys NVSS (Condon et al. 1998) n = 1.4 GHz dec +90o to -40o SUMSS (Bock et al. 1999) n = 843 MHz dec -30o to -90o Currently almost 70% complete, will be finished by Dec 2003 Both surveys have 45” beam, 3-5 mJy det. limit, position accuracy 1-2” 31 May 2002 6dF workshop 2 Typical spectra of faint radio sources (2dFGRS, Sadler et al. 1999) Ha Hb [OIII] • Star-forming galaxy, z=0.14 (40% of 2dFGRS/NVSS) • Emission-line AGN, z=0.15 (10%) • Absorption-line AGN, z=0.14 (50%) 31 May 2002 6dF workshop 3 Radio emission from star-forming galaxies UGC 09057 NGC 5257/5258 z=0.0054 z=0.0223 Estimated star formation rate: 1.8 Msun/yr 120 Msun/yr NGC 7252 z=0.0161 32 Msun/yr (Radio emission is dominated by synchrotron radiation from electrons accelerated by supernova remnants, most are detected as IRAS sources) 31 May 2002 6dF workshop 4 Local star-formation density from radio and Ha data Local star formation density (zero-point of Ha Madau diagram) in Msun/yr/Mpc3 : Ha: 0.013 +/-0.006 (Gallego et al. 1995) Radio: 0.022 +/-0.004 (Sadler et al. 2002) Radio 31 May 2002 6dF workshop Radio data show more galaxies with very high SFR (> 30 Msun/yr), otherwise very good agreement. 5 Radio emission from active galaxies TGN284Z051 z=0.1065 TGN348Z183 z=0.1790 1.4 GHz radio power and projected linear size: 1024.3 W/Hz 1025.0 W/Hz 327 kpc 475 kpc 31 May 2002 6dF workshop TGS153Z214 z=0.2079 1024.8 W/Hz 471 kpc 6 Redshift distribution of 2dFGRS radio sources (and all galaxies) (Colless 2001) 31 May 2002 6dF workshop 7 Local radio luminosity function of active and star-forming galaxies Below 1025 W/Hz, the local radio source population is always a mixture of AGN and star-forming galaxies. i.e. There is probably no observational regime where radio surveys detect only star-forming galaxies. Low-lum AGN are hard to find 31 May 2002 6dF workshop Spectra vital! 8 What do we gain from 6dF? A LARGE data set of radio-source spectra over a SMALL redshift range (no evolution). Total volume (to z=0.04) ~ 2x107 Mpc3 All-sky radio surveys (NVSS/SUMSS) with detection limits of 2-5 mJy at 1400/843 MHz typical radio powers of 1021 - 1025 W/Hz in 6dFGS volume The deepest current radio surveys (to 10-50 mJy in HDF N and S) 1022 - 1025 W/Hz at z=2 - 3 31 May 2002 6dF workshop 9 6dFGS ‘Additional targets’ 6dFGS unallocated fibres placed on NVSS/SUMSS radio IDs which have bJ<18 mag but which are not in the main sample: • Stellar objects (foreground stars, QSOs, compact galaxies) • Blue galaxies (starburst, e+A systems?, AGN) What fraction of the local radio-source population is missed because hosts appear stellar? Don’t need all objects observed, just a sub-sample - i.e. flexible 31 May 2002 6dF workshop 10 Radio detection of planetary nebulae Galactic planetary nebulae are detectable as thermal radio sources. NVSS/SUMSS/6dFGS likely to discover new high-latitude PNe among stellar ‘extra targets’. 31 May 2002 6dF workshop 11 6dFGS data, May 2002... Ks=4.5 mJy, below 6dFGS limit? Radio galaxy at z=0.0651, S1.4 = 147 mJy (NVSS) 31 May 2002 6dF workshop 12