The Micro-Jansky Sky at 8.4 GHz
E. B. Fomalont, K. I. Kellermann, R. B. Partridge, R. A. Windhorst, E. A. Richards
Abstract
We present the results from two radio integrations at 8.4 GHz using the VLA. One of the fields, at 13h,+43d (SA13 field), has an rms noise level of 1.49 microJy and is the deepest radio image yet made. Thirty-four sources in a complete sample were detected above 7.5 microJy and 25 are optically identified to a limit of I=25.8, using our deep HST and ground-based images. The radio sources are usually located within 0.5" (typically 5 kpc) of a galaxy nucleus, and generally have a diameter less than 2.5". The second field at 17h, +50d (Hercules Field) has an rms noise of 35 microJy and contains 10 sources. We have also analyzed a complete flux density-limited sample at 8.4 GHz of 89 sources from five deep radio surveys, including the Hubble deep field. Half of all the optical counterparts are with galaxies brighter than I=23 mag, but 20% are fainter than I=25.5 mag. We confirm the tendency for the micro-Jansky radio sources to prefer multi-galaxy systems. The distribution of the radio spectral index between 1.4 and 8.4 GHz peaks at alpha = -0.75~ with a median value of -0.6. The average spectral index becomes steeper (lower values) for sources below 35 microJy, and for sources identified with optical counterparts fainter than I=25.5 mag. The differential radio count between 7.5 and 1000 microJy has a slope of -2.11 +/-0.13 and a surface density of 0.64 sources per square-arcmin with flux density greater than $7.5 microJy.