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The GLEAM 4-Jy (G4Jy) Sample: I. Definition and the catalogue

Authors :
White, Sarah V.
Franzen, Thomas M. O.
Riseley, Chris J.
Wong, O. Ivy
Kapińska, Anna D.
Hurley-Walker, Natasha
Callingham, Joseph R.
Thorat, Kshitij
Wu, Chen
Hancock, Paul
Hunstead, Richard W.
Seymour, Nick
Swan, Jesse
Wayth, Randall
Morgan, John
Chhetri, Rajan
Jackson, Carole
Weston, Stuart
Bell, Martin
For, Bi-Qing
Gaensler, B. M.
Johnston-Hollitt, Melanie
Offringa, André
Staveley-Smith, Lister
White, Sarah V.
Franzen, Thomas M. O.
Riseley, Chris J.
Wong, O. Ivy
Kapińska, Anna D.
Hurley-Walker, Natasha
Callingham, Joseph R.
Thorat, Kshitij
Wu, Chen
Hancock, Paul
Hunstead, Richard W.
Seymour, Nick
Swan, Jesse
Wayth, Randall
Morgan, John
Chhetri, Rajan
Jackson, Carole
Weston, Stuart
Bell, Martin
For, Bi-Qing
Gaensler, B. M.
Johnston-Hollitt, Melanie
Offringa, André
Staveley-Smith, Lister
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The Murchison Widefield Array (MWA) has observed the entire southern sky (Declination, $\delta <$ 30 deg) at low radio-frequencies, over the range 72-231 MHz. These observations constitute the GaLactic and Extragalactic All-sky MWA (GLEAM) Survey, and we use the extragalactic catalogue (Galactic latitude, $|b| >$ 10 deg) to define the GLEAM 4-Jy (G4Jy) Sample. This is a complete sample of the 'brightest' radio-sources ($S_{\mathrm{151MHz}} >$ 4 Jy), the majority of which are active galactic nuclei with powerful radio-jets. Crucially, low-frequency observations allow the selection of such sources in an orientation-independent way (i.e. minimising the bias caused by Doppler boosting, inherent in high-frequency surveys). We then use higher-resolution radio images, and information at other wavelengths, to morphologically classify the brightest components in GLEAM. We also conduct cross-checks against the literature, and perform internal matching, in order to improve sample completeness (which is estimated to be $>$ 95.5%). This results in a catalogue of 1,863 sources, making the G4Jy Sample over 10 times larger than that of the revised Third Cambridge Catalogue of Radio Sources (3CRR; $S_{\mathrm{178MHz}} >$ 10.9 Jy). Of these G4Jy sources, 78 are resolved by the MWA (Phase-I) synthesised beam ($\sim$2 arcmin at 200 MHz), and we label 67% of the sample as 'single', 26% as 'double', 4% as 'triple', and 3% as having 'complex' morphology at $\sim$1 GHz (45-arcsec resolution). Alongside this, our value-added catalogue provides mid-infrared source associations (subject to 6-arcsec resolution at 3.4 micron) for the radio emission, as identified through visual inspection and thorough checks against the literature. As such, the G4Jy Sample can be used as a reliable training set for cross-identification via machine-learning algorithms. [Abstract abridged for arXiv submission.]<br />Comment: 57 pages (30 MB in size), 23 figures, 16 tables, accepted for publication in PASA, and now updated to match the final proof. Full-resolution images will be used for the published version, available through the journal. To keep up-to-date regarding the G4Jy Sample, bookmark https://github.com/svw26/G4Jy

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1176399309
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1017.pasa.2020.9