Keck Spectroscopy and Imaging of Faint Galaxies Identified as MicroJansky Radio Sources

Abstract

We investigate the nature of the faintest radio sources detected in 3 VLA surveys, to faint limits 8 microJy at 8.5 GHz. Using the Keck Low Resolution Imaging Spectrograph in BRI and the Near Infra Red Camera in K, we image 51 radio sources, and identify probable optical counterparts for 50. With LRIS spectroscopy, we successfully acquire new redshifts for 17 sources, and 9 have redshifts from previous data. Of this sample of 26, about 60 per cent are disk galaxies with high radio to optical ratios, indicating ongoing or very recent starbursts, at redshifts z=0-1. Others are normal, non-interacting galaxies at z<0.4, QSOs and radioluminous giant ellipticals (obscured AGN?). All of the 14 non-QSO galaxies with spectra show emission lines, but with luminosities corresponding to star-formation rates about an order of magnitude lower than estimated from the high radio luminosities (dust extinction?). Three have strong H-delta absorption (`e+a galaxies'). The Keck spectra also provide approximate emission line widths and rotation curves. Most (12/14) have kinematics implying large dynamical masses, and moderate excitation ratios consistent with L* spirals. The other two, which have sub-L* optical luminosities, appear to be low-mass galaxies with much higher excitations and may be more similar to HII galaxies.

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