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A sample of 6C radio sources designed to find objects at redshift<i>z</i>&gt; 4 - II. Spectrophotometry and emission-line properties

64

Citations

48

References

2001

Year

Abstract

This is the second in a series of three papers that present and interpret basic observational data on the 6C* 151-MHz radio sample: a low-frequency selected sample that exploits filtering criteria based on radio properties (steep spectral index and small angular size) to find radio sources at redshift z . 4 within a 0.133-sr patch of sky. We present results of a programme of optical spectroscopy that has yielded redshifts in the range 0:5 & z & 4:4 for the 29 sources in the sample, all but six of which are secure. We find that the filtering criteria used for 6C* are very effective in excluding the low-redshift, low-luminosity radio sources: the median redshift of 6C* is z < 1:9 compared with z < 1:1 for a complete sample matched in 151-MHz flux density. By combining the emission-line data set for the 6C* radio sources with those for the 3CRR, 6CE and 7CRS samples we establish that z $ 1:75 radio galaxies follow a rough proportionality between Lya and 151-MHz luminosity, which, like similar correlations seen in samples of lower redshift radio sources, is indicative of a primary link between the power in the source of the photoionizing photons (most likely a hidden quasar nucleus) and the power carried by the radio jets. We argue that radio sources modify their environments and that the range of emission-line properties seen is determined more by the range of source age than by the range in ambient environment. The smallest z . 1:75 radio galaxies have all the properties expected if the size distribution of luminous high-redshift steep-spectrum radio sources reflects a broad range (,2 dex) of source ages with a narrower range (& 1.5 dex) of environmental densities, namely: (1) high-ionization lines, e.g. Lya, of relatively low luminosity; (2) boosted low-ionization lines, e.g. C II]; (3) spatially compact emission-line regions; and (4) H I-absorbed Lya profiles. This is in accord with the idea that all highredshift, high-luminosity radio sources are triggered in similar environments, presumably recently collapsed massive structures.

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