High frequency radio SEDs and polarization fractions of sources in an ACT survey field

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics – Cosmology and Extragalactic Astrophysics

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48 pages, 13 figures, ApJ, in press

Scientific paper

We present flux densities and polarization percentages of 159 radio galaxies based on nearly simultaneous VLA observations at four frequencies from 5 to 43GHz. This sample is selected from the high-frequency Australia Telescope 20GHz (AT20G) survey and consists of all sources with S_{20GHz}>40mJy in an equatorial field of the ACT survey. For a subset of 25 of these sources we used the GBT to obtain 90GHz data. The goals of this program are: 1) a characterization of the spectra, polarization and variability of high frequency-selected radio sources; 2) extrapolating from the few GHz regime to the ~150GHz regime of the ACT survey, allowing for more accurate removal of the radio source signal in our particular field; and 3) providing a data set that will allow more accurate modeling of the high-frequency radio source contamination in current and future SZ and CMB experiments. We find that, as expected, this sample consists of flatter spectrum and more compact or point-like sources than low frequency-selected samples. In the K-band, variability is typically <~20%, although there are exceptions. The higher frequency data is well suited to the detection of extreme Giga-Hertz Peak spectrum Sources (GPS). The inclusion of the 43GHz data causes the relative fraction of inverted spectrum sources to go down and of peaked spectrum sources to go up when compared with the AT20G survey results. The trend largely continues with the inclusion of the 90GHz data, although ~10% of the sources with GBT data show a spectral upturn from 43GHz to 90GHz. The measured polarization fractions are typically <5%, although in some cases they are measured to be up to ~20%. For the ~40% of the sample with detected polarized flux in all four bands, the polarization fractions typically increase with frequency. This trend is stronger for steeper spectrum sources as well as for the lower flux density sources.

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