SIMBAD references

1999MNRAS.310..465G - Mon. Not. R. Astron. Soc., 310, 465-475 (1999/December-1)

The sedentary multifrequency survey - I. Statistical identification and cosmological properties of high-energy peaked BL Lacs.

GIOMMI P., MENNA M.T. and PADOVANI P.

Abstract (from CDS):

We have assembled a multifrequency data base by cross-correlating the NRAO VLA Sky Survey (NVSS) catalogue of radio sources with the RASSBSC list of soft X-ray sources, obtaining optical magnitude estimates from the Palomar and UK Schmidt surveys as provided by the Automated Plate Measurement (APM) and COSMOS on-line services. By exploiting the nearly unique broad-band properties of high-energy peaked BL Lacs (HBL), we have statistically identified a sample of 218 objects that is expected to include about 85per cent of BL Lacs and that is therefore several times larger than all other published samples of HBLs. Using a subset (155 objects) that is radio-flux-limited and statistically well-defined, we have derived the VVm distribution and the logN-logS of extreme HBLs (fxfr{ges}3x10–10erg.cm–2.s–1.Jy–1) down to 3.5mJy. We find that the logN-logS flattens around 20mJy and that <]VVm>=0.42±0.02. This extends to the radio band earlier results, based on much smaller X-ray-selected samples, about the anomalous cosmological observational properties of HBLs. A comparison with the expected radio logN-logS of all BL Lacs (based on a beaming model) shows that extreme HBLs make up roughly 2per cent of the BL Lac population, independently of radio flux. This result, together with the flatness of the radio logN-logS at low fluxes, is in contrast with the predictions of a recent model that assumes an anticorrelation between peak frequency and bolometric luminosity. This scenario would in fact result in an increasing dominance of HBLs at lower radio fluxes; an effect that, if at all present, must start at fluxes fainter than our survey limit. The extreme fxfr flux ratios and high X-ray fluxes of these BL Lacs makes them good candidate TeV sources; some of the brighter (and closer) ones are possibly detectable with the current generation of Cerenkov telescopes. Statistical identification of sources based on their location in multiparameter space, of the kind described here, will have to become commonplace with the advent of the many large, deep surveys at various frequencies currently scheduled or under construction.

Abstract Copyright: 1999, Royal Astronomical Society

Journal keyword(s): galaxies: active - BL Lacertae objects: general

Simbad objects: 5

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