Redshifts of CLASS Radio Sources
Citations Over TimeTop 10% of 2000 papers
Abstract
Spectroscopic observations of a sample of 42 flat-spectrum radio sources from the Cosmic Lens All-Sky Survey (CLASS) have yielded a mean redshift of $ = 1.27$ with an RMS spread of 0.95, at a completeness level of 64%. The sample consists of sources with a 5-GHz flux density of 25-50 mJy, making it the faintest flat-spectrum radio sample for which the redshift distribution has been studied. The spectra, obtained with the Willam Herschel Telescope (WHT), consist mainly of broad-line quasars at $z>1$ and narrow-line galaxies at $z<0.5$. Though the mean redshift of flat-spectrum radio sources exhibits little variation over more than two orders of magnitude in radio flux density, there is evidence for a decreasing fraction of quasars at weaker flux levels. In this paper we present the results of our spectroscopic observations, and discuss the implications for constraining cosmological parameters with statistical analyses of the CLASS survey.
Related Papers
- → Using Quasars as Standard Clocks for Measuring Cosmological Redshift(2012)26 cited
- → Analysis of the impact of broad absorption lines on quasar redshift measurements with synthetic observations(2023)8 cited
- → A Subset of Quasars Identified by Large Values of Their Doppler Redshift(2007)7 cited
- → Analysis of the impact of broad absorption lines on quasar redshift measurements with synthetic observations(2023)4 cited
- → Periodicity in quasar redshifts or selection effects?(1999)