Article first published online: 1 AUG 2006We present some first results on the variability, polarization and general properties of radio sources selected at 20 GHz, the highest frequency at which a sensitive radio survey has been carried out over a large area of sky. Sources with flux densities above 100 mJy in the Australia Telescope Compact Array 20 GHz pilot survey at declination −60° to −70° were observed at up to three epochs during 2002–04, including near-simultaneous measurements at 5, 8 and 18 GHz in 2003. Of the 173 sources detected, 65 per cent are candidate QSOs or BL Lac objects, 20 per cent galaxies and 15 per cent faint (bJ > 22 mag) optical objects or blank fields. On a 1–2 yr time-scale, the general level of variability a...
The Australia Telescope 20 GHz (AT20G) survey is a blind survey of the whole Southern sky at 20 GHz ...
The Australia Telescope 20-GHz (AT20G) Survey is a blind survey of the whole southern sky at 20 GHz ...
This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society ...
We present some first results on the variability, polarization and general properties of radio sourc...
Restricted Access. An open-access version is available at arXiv.org (one of the alternative location...
We present polarization data for 180 extragalactic sources extracted from the Australia Telescope 20...
© 2017 The Author(s). We present high sensitivity (s P ~- 0.6mJy) polarimetric observations in seven...
We present polarization measurements at 8.4, 22, and 43 GHz made with the Very Large Array (VLA) of ...
We present polarization measurements of extragalactic radio sources observed during the cosmic micro...
We present the full source catalogue from the Australia Telescope 20 GHz (AT20G) Survey. The AT20G ...
The high-frequency (> 20 GHz), bright flux density (> 200 mJy) radio population is dominated by blaz...
Radio sources with a gigahertz-peaked spectrum (GPS) are thought to be the progenitors of large-scal...
We present high sensitivity (~0.6 mJy) polarimetric observations in seven bands, from 2.1 to 38 GHz,...
The Australia Telescope 20-GHz (AT20G) Survey is a blind survey of the whole southern sky at 20 GHz ...
Restricted Access. An open-access version is available at arXiv.org (one of the alternative location...
The Australia Telescope 20 GHz (AT20G) survey is a blind survey of the whole Southern sky at 20 GHz ...
The Australia Telescope 20-GHz (AT20G) Survey is a blind survey of the whole southern sky at 20 GHz ...
This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society ...
We present some first results on the variability, polarization and general properties of radio sourc...
Restricted Access. An open-access version is available at arXiv.org (one of the alternative location...
We present polarization data for 180 extragalactic sources extracted from the Australia Telescope 20...
© 2017 The Author(s). We present high sensitivity (s P ~- 0.6mJy) polarimetric observations in seven...
We present polarization measurements at 8.4, 22, and 43 GHz made with the Very Large Array (VLA) of ...
We present polarization measurements of extragalactic radio sources observed during the cosmic micro...
We present the full source catalogue from the Australia Telescope 20 GHz (AT20G) Survey. The AT20G ...
The high-frequency (> 20 GHz), bright flux density (> 200 mJy) radio population is dominated by blaz...
Radio sources with a gigahertz-peaked spectrum (GPS) are thought to be the progenitors of large-scal...
We present high sensitivity (~0.6 mJy) polarimetric observations in seven bands, from 2.1 to 38 GHz,...
The Australia Telescope 20-GHz (AT20G) Survey is a blind survey of the whole southern sky at 20 GHz ...
Restricted Access. An open-access version is available at arXiv.org (one of the alternative location...
The Australia Telescope 20 GHz (AT20G) survey is a blind survey of the whole Southern sky at 20 GHz ...
The Australia Telescope 20-GHz (AT20G) Survey is a blind survey of the whole southern sky at 20 GHz ...
This article has been accepted for publication in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society ...