Abstract
We study a sample of 883sources detected in a deep Very Large Array survey at 1.4GHz in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South. This paper focuses on the identification of their optical and infrared (IR) counterparts. We use a likelihood-ratio technique that is particularly useful when dealing with deep optical images to minimize the number of spurious associations. We find a reliable counterpart for 95% of our radio sources. Most of the counterparts (74%) are detected at optical wavelengths, but there is a significant fraction (21%) that are only detectable in the IR. Combining newly acquired optical spectra with data from the literature, we are able to assign a redshift to 81% of the identified radio sources (37% spectroscopic). We also investigate the X-ray properties of the radio sources using the Chandra 4Ms and 250ks observations. In particular, we use a stacking technique to derive the average properties of radio objects undetected in the Chandra images. The results of our analysis are collected in a new catalog containing the position of the optical/IR counterpart, the redshift information, and the X-ray fluxes. It is the deepest multi-wavelength catalog of radio sources, which will be used for future study of this galaxy population. © 2012. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved..
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Bonzini, M., Mainieri, V., Padovani, P., Kellermann, K. I., Miller, N., Rosati, P., … Xue, Y. Q. (2012). The sub-mJy radio population of the E-CDFS: Optical and infrared counterpart identification. Astrophysical Journal, Supplement Series, 203(1). https://doi.org/10.1088/0067-0049/203/1/15
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