Bibcode
Snellen, I. A. G.; Schilizzi, R. T.; Bremer, M. N.; de Bruyn, A. G.; Miley, G. K.; Rottgering, H. J. A.; McMahon, R. G.; Perez Fournon, I.
Bibliographical reference
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Volume 301, Issue 4, pp. 985-1000.
Advertised on:
12
1998
Citations
26
Refereed citations
22
Description
A sample of 47 faint Gigahertz Peaked Spectrum (GPS) radio sources
selected from the Westerbork Northern Sky Survey (WENSS) has been imaged
in the optical and near-infrared, resulting in an identification
fraction of 87 per cent. The R-IR-K colours of the faint optical
counterparts are as expected for passively evolving elliptical galaxies,
assuming that they follow the R-band Hubble diagram as determined for
radio-bright GPS galaxies. We find evidence that the radio spectral
properties of the GPS quasars are different from those of GPS galaxies.
The observed distribution of radio spectral peak frequencies for GPS
sources optically identified with bright stellar objects (presumably
quasars) is shifted compared with GPS sources identified with faint or
extended optical objects (presumably galaxies), in the sense that a GPS
quasar is likely to have a higher peak frequency than a GPS galaxy. This
means that the true peak frequency distribution is different for the GPS
galaxies and quasars, because the sample selection effects are
independent of optical identification. The correlation between peak
frequency and redshift that has been suggested for bright sources has
not been found in this sample; no correlation exists between R magnitude
(and therefore redshift) and peak frequency for the GPS galaxies. We
therefore believe that the claimed correlation is actually caused by the
dependence of the peak frequency on optical host, because the GPS
galaxies are generally at lower redshifts than the quasars. The
difference in the peak frequency distributions of the GPS galaxies and
quasars is further evidence against the hypothesis that they form a
single class of object.