CHILES VERDES: Radio variability at an unprecedented depth and cadence in the COSMOS field
Abstract
Although it is well-established that some extragalactic radio sources are time-variable, the properties of this radio variability, and its connection with host galaxy properties, remain to be explored---particularly for faint sources. Here we present an analysis of radio variable sources from the CHILES Variable and Explosive Radio Dynamic Evolution Survey (CHILES VERDES)---a partner project of the 1.4 GHz COSMOS H1 Large Extragalactic Survey (CHILES). CHILES VERDES provides an unprecedented combination of survey depth, duration, and cadence, with 960 hrs of 1--2 GHz continuum VLA data obtained over 209 epochs between 2013 and 2019 in a 0.44 deg2 section of the well-studied extragalactic deep field, COSMOS. We identified 18 moderate-variability sources (showing 10-30\% flux density variation) and 40 lower variability sources (2-10\% flux density variation). They are mainly active galactic nuclei (AGN) with radio luminosities in the range of 1022-1027 W Hz-1 based on cross-matching with COSMOS multi-wavelength catalogs. The moderate-variability sources span redshifts z=0.22-1.56, have mostly flat radio spectra (α>-0.5), and vary on timescales ranging from days to years. Lower-variability sources have similar properties, but have generally higher radio luminosities than the moderate-variability sources, extend to z = 2.8, and have steeper radio spectra (α<-0.5). No star-forming galaxy showed statistically significant variability in our analysis. The observed variability likely originates from scintillation on short () timescales, and Doppler-boosted intrinsic AGN variability on long (month--year) timescales.