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We report the identification of radio (1.4 and 3 GHz) and mid-infrared, far-infrared, and sub-mm (24-850$mu$m) emission at the position of one of 41 UV-bright ($mathrm{M_{UV}^{}}lesssim-21.25$) $zsimeq6.6-6.9$ Lyman-break galaxy candidates in the 1.5 deg$^2$ COSMOS field. This source, COS-87259, exhibits a sharp flux discontinuity (factor $>$3) between two narrow/intermediate bands at 9450 $mathring{A}$ and 9700 $mathring{A}$ and is undetected in all nine bands blueward of 9600 $mathring{A}$, as expected from a Lyman-alpha break at $zsimeq6.8$. The full multi-wavelength (X-ray through radio) data of COS-87529 can be self-consistently explained by a very massive (M$_{ast}=10^{10.8}$ M$_{odot}$) and extremely red (rest-UV slope $beta=-0.59$) $zsimeq6.8$ galaxy with hyperluminous infrared emission (L$_{mathrm{IR}}=10^{13.6}$ L$_{odot}$) powered by both an intense burst of highly-obscured star formation (SFR$approx$1800 M$_{odot}$ yr$^{-1}$) and an obscured ($tau_{mathrm{9.7mu m}}=7.7pm2.5$) radio-loud (L$_{mathrm{1.4 GHz}}sim10^{25.5}$ W Hz$^{-1}$) AGN. The radio emission is compact (1.04$pm$0.12 arcsec) and exhibits an ultra-steep spectrum between 1.4-3 GHz ($alpha=-2.06^{+0.27}_{-0.25}$) with evidence of spectral flattening at lower frequencies, consistent with known $z>4$ radio galaxies. We also demonstrate that COS-87259 may reside in a significant (11$times$) galaxy overdensity at $zsimeq6.6-6.9$, as common for systems hosting radio-loud AGN. Nonetheless, a spectroscopic redshift will ultimately be required to establish the true nature of COS-87259 as we cannot yet completely rule out low-redshift solutions. If confirmed to lie at $zsimeq6.8$, the properties of COS-87259 would be consistent with a picture wherein AGN and highly-obscured star formation activity are fairly common among very massive (M$_{ast}>10^{10}$ M$_{odot}$) reionization-era galaxies.
We present a study of the low-frequency radio properties of star forming (SF) galaxies and active galactic nuclei (AGN) up to redshift $z=2.5$. The new spectral window probed by the Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) allows us to reconstruct the radio conti
Recently, Saxena et al. (2018) reported the discovery of a possible radio galaxy, J1530$+$1049 at a redshift of z=5.72. We observed the source with the European Very Long Baseline Interferometry Network at $1.7$ GHz. We detected two faint radio featu
Radio-loud AGN (>10^{22} W/Hz at 1.4 GHz) will be the dominant bright source population detected with the SKA. The high resolution that the SKA will provide even in wide-area surveys will mean that, for the first time sensitive, multi-frequency total
To constrain the emission mechanisms responsible for generating the energy powering the active galactic nuclei (AGN) and their host galaxies, it is essential to disentangle the contributions from both as a function of wavelength. Here we introduce a
Context. With the latest infrared surveys, the number of massive protostellar candidates has increased significantly. New studies have posed additional questions on important issues about the formation, evolution, and other phenomena related to them.