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High-energy sources at low radio frequency: the Murchison Widefield Array view of Fermi blazars

Authors :
Giroletti, M.
Massaro, F.
D'Abrusco, R.
Lico, R.
Burlon, D.
Hurley-Walker, N.
Johnston-Hollitt, M.
Morgan, J.
Pavlidou, V.
Bell, M.
Bernardi, G.
Bhat, R.
Bowman, J. D.
Briggs, F.
Cappallo, R. J.
Corey, B. E.
Deshpande, A. A.
Ewall-Rice, A.
Emrich, D.
Gaensler, B. M.
Goeke, R.
Greenhill, L. J.
Hazelton, B. J.
Hindson, L.
Kaplan, D. L.
Kasper, J. C.
Kratzenberg, E.
Feng, L.
Jacobs, D.
Kurdryavtseva, N.
Lenc, E.
Lonsdale, C. J.
Lynch, M. J.
McKinley, B.
McWhirter, S. R.
Mitchell, D. A.
Morales, M. F.
Morgan, E.
Oberoi, D.
Offringa, A. R.
Ord, S. M.
Pindor, B.
Prabu, T.
Procopio, P.
Riding, J.
Rogers, A. E. E.
Roshi, A.
Shankar, N. Udaya
Srivani, K. S.
Subrahmanyan, R.
Tingay, S. J.
Waterson, M.
Wayth, R. B.
Webster, R. L.
Whitney, A. R.
Williams, A.
Williams, C. L.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Low-frequency radio arrays are opening a new window for the study of the sky, both to study new phenomena and to better characterize known source classes. Being flat-spectrum sources, blazars are so far poorly studied at low radio frequencies. We characterize the spectral properties of the blazar population at low radio frequency compare the radio and high-energy properties of the gamma-ray blazar population, and search for radio counterparts of unidentified gamma-ray sources. We cross-correlated the 6,100 deg^2 Murchison Widefield Array Commissioning Survey catalogue with the Roma blazar catalogue, the third catalogue of active galactic nuclei detected by Fermi-LAT, and the unidentified members of the entire third catalogue of gamma-ray sources detected by \fermilat. When available, we also added high-frequency radio data from the Australia Telescope 20 GHz catalogue. We find low-frequency counterparts for 186 out of 517 (36%) blazars, 79 out of 174 (45%) gamma-ray blazars, and 8 out of 73 (11%) gamma-ray blazar candidates. The mean low-frequency (120--180 MHz) blazar spectral index is $\langle \alpha_\mathrm{low} \rangle=0.57\pm0.02$: blazar spectra are flatter than the rest of the population of low-frequency sources, but are steeper than at $\sim$GHz frequencies. Low-frequency radio flux density and gamma-ray energy flux display a mildly significant and broadly scattered correlation. Ten unidentified gamma-ray sources have a (probably fortuitous) positional match with low radio frequency sources. Low-frequency radio astronomy provides important information about sources with a flat radio spectrum and high energy. However, the relatively low sensitivity of the present surveys still misses a significant fraction of these objects. Upcoming deeper surveys, such as the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-Sky MWA (GLEAM) survey, will provide further insight into this population.<br />Comment: accepted for publication in A&A

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1602.08869
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201527817