A relativistic jet from Cygnus X-1 in the low/hard X-ray state
(2001)
Multi-wavelength observations of the Soft Gamma Repeater SGR 1900+14 during its April 2001 activation
(2001)
On the peak radio and X-ray emission from neutron star and black hole candidate X-ray transients
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 324:4 (2001) 923-930
On the redshift cut-off for steep-spectrum radio sources
ArXiv astro-ph/0106473 (2001)
Abstract:
We use three samples (3CRR, 6CE and 6C*) selected at low radio frequency to constrain the cosmic evolution in the radio luminosity function (RLF) for the `most luminous' steep-spectrum radio sources. Although intrinsically rare, such sources give the largest possible baseline in redshift for the complete flux-density-limited samples currently available. Using parametric models to describe the RLF which incorporate distributions in radio spectral shape and linear size as well as the usual luminosity and redshift, we find that the data are consistent with a constant comoving space density between z~2.5 and z~4.5. We find this model is favoured over a model with similar evolutionary behaviour to that of optically-selected quasars (i.e. a roughly Gaussian distribution in redshift) with a probability ratio of ~25:1 and ~100:1 for spatially-flat cosmologies with Omega_Lambda = 0 and Omega_Lambda = 0.7 respectively. Within the uncertainties, this evolutionary behaviour may be reconciled with the shallow decline preferred for the comoving space density of flat-spectrum sources by Dunlop & Peacock (1990) and Jarvis & Rawlings (2000), in line with the expectations of Unified Schemes.X-Ray States and Radio Emission in the Black Hole Candidate XTE J1550–564
The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 554:1 (2001) 43-48