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Published May 10, 2013 | Published
Journal Article Open

Sensitive Search for Radio Variables and Transients in the Extended Chandra Deep Field South

Abstract

We report on an analysis of the Extended Chandra Deep Field South (E-CDFS) region using archival data from the Very Large Array, with the goal of studying radio variability and transients at the sub-milliJansky level. The 49 epochs of E-CDFS observations at 1.4 GHz sample timescales from 1 day to 3 months. We find that only a fraction (1%) of unresolved radio sources above 40 μJy are variable at the 4σ level. There is no evidence that the fractional variability changes along with the known transition of radio-source populations below 1 mJy. Optical identifications of the sources show that the variable radio emission is associated with the central regions of an active galactic nucleus or a star-forming galaxy. After a detailed comparison of the efficacy of various source-finding algorithms, we use the best to carry out a transient search. No transients were found. This implies that the areal density of transients with peak flux density greater than 0.21 mJy is less than 0.37 deg^(–2) (at a confidence level of 95%). This result is approximately an order of magnitude below the transient rate measured at 5 GHz by Bower et al. but it is consistent with more recent upper limits from Frail et al. Our findings suggest that the radio sky at 1.4 GHz is relatively quiet. For multi-wavelength transient searches, such as the electromagnetic counterparts to gravitational waves, this frequency may be optimal for reducing the high background of false positives.

Additional Information

© 2013 American Astronomical Society. Received 2012 December 16; accepted 2013 March 22; published 2013 April 25. M. Kunal wishes to thank Rick Perley, Eric Greisen, Sanjay Bhatnagar, Andrea Petric, Margherita Bonzini, Bill Cotton, and Paul Hancock for useful discussions. The National Radio Astronomy Observatory is a facility of the National Science Foundation operated under cooperative agreement by Associated Universities, Inc. S.R.K.'s research in part is supported by NASA and NSF. This research has made use of NASA's Astrophysics Data System, Vizier, and NED. We thank the anonymous referee for useful comments.

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