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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 features with a separation of $sim 400$ mas. The radio power calculated from the VLA flux density by Saxena et al. (2018), and the projected source size derived from our EVN data place J1530$+$1049 among the medium-sized symmetric objects (MSOs) which are thought to be young counterparts of radio galaxies (An and Baan 2012). Thus, our finding is consistent with a radio galaxy in an early phase of its evolution as proposed by Saxena et al. (2018).
Active galactic nuclei are the most luminous persistent (non-transient, even if often variable) objects in the Universe. They are bright in the entire electromagnetic spectrum. Blazars are a special class where the jets point nearly to our line of si
Radio sources with steep spectra are preferentially associated with the most distant galaxies, the $alpha-z$ relation, but the reason for this relation is an open question. The spatial distribution of spectra in high-z radio sources can be used to st
We report the discovery of a relic Giant Radio Galaxy (GRG) J021659-044920 at redshift $z sim 1.3$ that exhibits large-scale extended, nearly co-spatial, radio and X-ray emission from radio lobes, but no detection of Active Galactic Nuclei core, jets
We present a detailed study of the kinematic, chemical and excitation properties of the giant Ly$alpha$ emitting nebula and the giant ion{H}{I} absorber associated with the $z = 2.92$ radio galaxy MRC 0943--242, using spectroscopic observations from
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