The AGN Component in Deep Radio Fields: Current Understanding
Abstract
The present paper reviews our current understanding of the AGN component in sub-mJy radio fields, as it results from the exploitation of multi-frequency information available in two deep extra-galactic radio fields: the ATESP 5 GHz sample and the First Look Survey. One of the key issues addressed here is whether low-power AGNs are more related to efficiently accreting systems (mostly radio-quiet) or to systems with very low accretion rates (mostly radio-loud). The emerging picture is the following. Radio-loud jet-dominated radio galaxies seem to be largely dominant down to flux densities of the order of e.g. S>400 microJy. At lower flux densities (S(1.4 GHz) > 100 microJy) radio-loud AGN are still present in significant numbers. However a population of radio-emitting AGNs, whose properties are consistent with those expected from existing radio-quiet AGN modeling, clearly shows up. This may indicate that the bulk of the radio-quiet AGN population could emerge from studies of deeper (S<100 microJy) radio samples. The radio-quiet AGN component could be recognised thanks to the availability of IR colors which prove to be especially useful to efficiently separate radio sources triggered by AGNs, from sources triggered by star-formation.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.