Imaging and Spectroscopy of Ultra Steep Spectrum Radio Sources

Abstract

We present a sample of 40 Ultra Steep Spectrum (USS, α ≤ -1.3, S α) radio sources selected from the Westerbork in the Southern Hemisphere (WISH) catalog. The USS sources have been imaged in K--band at the Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory (CTIO) and with the Very Large Telescope at Cerro Paranal. We also present VLT, Keck and Willian Herschel Telescope(WHT) optical spectroscopy of 14 targets selection from 4 different USS samples. For 12 sources, we have been able to determine the redshifts, including 4 new radio galaxies at z > 3. We find that most of our USS sources have predominantly small (6'') radio sizes and faint magnitudes (K~18). The mean K-band counterpart magnitude is K=18.6. The expected redshift distribution estimated using the Hubble K-z diagram has a mean of zexp2.13, which is higher than the predicted redshift obtained for the SUMSS-NVSS sample and the expected redshift obtained in the 6C** survey. The compact USS sample analyzed here may contain a higher fraction of galaxies which are high redshift and/or are heavily obscured by dust. Using the 74, 352 and 1400 MHz flux densities of a sub-sample, we construct a radio colour-colour diagram. We find that all but one of our USS sources have a strong tendency to flatten below 352 MHz. We also find that the highest redshift source from this paper (at z=3.84) does not show evidence for spectral flattening down to 151 MHz. This suggests that very low frequency selected USS samples will likely be more efficient to find high redshift galaxies.

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