scholarly journals AGN feedback on the ISM of 3C 236

2012 ◽  
Vol 8 (S292) ◽  
pp. 374-374
Author(s):  
A. Labiano ◽  
S. García-Burillo ◽  
F. Combes ◽  
A. Usero ◽  
R. Soria-Ruiz ◽  
...  

AbstractWe have carried out 1mm/3mm continuum and 12CO(2−1) line high resolution observations to identify the footprints of AGN feedback on 3C 236. The CO emission comes from a spatially resolved disk characterized by a regular rotating pattern. Within the limits imposed by the sensitivity and velocity coverage of our data, we do not detect any outflow signatures in the cold molecular gas. Re-inspection of optical and IR spectra, shows the presence of a previously unknown ionized gas outflow. The star-formation efficiency in 3C 236, is consistent with the value measured in normal galaxies, which follow the canonical Kennicutt-Schmidt law. This result, confirmed to hold in other young radio sources examined in this work, is in stark contrast with the factor of 10–50 lower SFE that has been claimed to characterize evolved powerful radio galaxies. The recent reactivation of the AGN in 3C 236 is a likely explanation for the early evolutionary status of its molecular disk.

2020 ◽  
Vol 643 ◽  
pp. A111
Author(s):  
P. Dabhade ◽  
F. Combes ◽  
P. Salomé ◽  
J. Bagchi ◽  
M. Mahato

Radio galaxies with jets of relativistic particles are usually hosted by massive elliptical galaxies with active nuclei powered by accretion of interstellar matter onto a supermassive black hole. In some rare cases (< 5%), their jets drive the overall structure to sizes larger than 700 kpc, and they are called giant radio galaxies (GRGs). A very small fraction of the population of such radio galaxies contains molecular and atomic gas in the form of rings or discs that can fuel star formation. The origin of this gas is not well known; it has sometimes been associated with a minor merger with a gas-rich disc galaxy (e.g. Centaurus A) or cooling of material from a hot X-ray atmosphere (e.g. cooling flows). The giant radio jets might be the extreme evolution of these objects, and they can teach us about the radio galaxy evolution. We selected 12 targets from a catalogue of 820 GRGs that are likely to be in a gas-accretion and star formation phase. The targets were selected from the mid-infrared to contain heated dust. We report here the results of IRAM-30m observations, the molecular gas content, and the star formation efficiency, and we discuss the origin of the gas and disc morphology. Three out of our 12 targets are detected, and for the others, we report significant upper limits. We combine our three detections and upper limits with four additional detected GRGs from the literature to discuss the results. Most of the GRG targets belong to the main sequence, and a large fraction are in the passive domain. Their star formation efficiency is comparable to normal galaxies, except for two galaxies that are deficient in molecular gas with a short (∼200 Myr) depletion time, and a quiescent gas-rich giant spiral galaxy. In general, the depletion time is much longer than the lifetime of the giant radio jet.


2020 ◽  
Vol 15 (S359) ◽  
pp. 391-395
Author(s):  
Sebastian F. Sánchez ◽  
Carlos Lopez Cobá

AbstractWe summarize here some of the results reviewed recently by Sanchez (2020) comprising the advances in the comprehension of galaxies in the nearby universe based on integral field spectroscopic galaxy surveys. In particular we explore the bimodal distribution of galaxies in terms of the properties of their ionized gas, showing the connection between the star-formation (quenching) process with the presence (absence) of molecular gas and the star-formation efficiency. We show two galaxy examples that illustrates the well known fact that ionization in galaxies (and the processes that produce it), does not happen monolitically at galactic scales. This highlight the importance to explore the spectroscopic properties of galaxies and the evolutionary processes unveiled by them at different spatial scales, from sub-kpc to galaxy wide.


2014 ◽  
Vol 10 (S313) ◽  
pp. 231-235
Author(s):  
Leah K. Morabito ◽  
Adam Deller ◽  
J. B. R. Oonk ◽  
Huub Röttgering ◽  
George Miley

AbstractThe correlation between radio spectral steepness and redshift has been successfully used to find high redshift (z ⩾ 2) radio galaxies, but the origin of this relation is unknown. The ultra-steep spectra of high-z radio sources make them ideally suited for studies with the Low Band Antenna of the new Low Frequency Array, which covers 10–80 MHz and has baselines up to about 1300 km. As part of an ongoing survey, we use the longest baselines to map the low-frequency (< 70 MHz) spatial distributions along the jets of 5 bright extended steep spectrum high-z radio sources. From this, we will determine whether the spectra change over these spatially resolved sources, thereby constraining particle acceleration processes. We present early results from our low-frequency survey of ultra-steep spectrum radio galaxies. The first low frequency long baseline images of these objects are presented.


1993 ◽  
Vol 409 ◽  
pp. 170 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Mazzarella ◽  
J. R. Graham ◽  
D. B. Sanders ◽  
S. Djorgovski

1999 ◽  
Vol 186 ◽  
pp. 353-353
Author(s):  
Aaron S. Evans ◽  
D.B. Sanders ◽  
Joseph M. Mazzarella

We present K′-band imaging and millimeter (CO) spectroscopy of a 60 and 100 μm flux-limited sample of 35 low redshift, powerful radio galaxies (LzPRGs: P178MHz > 1023.5 W Hz−1 and 0.01 < z < 0.22). These observations are being obtained to test the hypothesis that the radio activity in LzPRGs is triggered by the merger of gas-rich galaxies, as well as to look for evolutionary correlations between the degree of irregularity in the K′-band morphologies, the amount of star-forming molecular gas, and the radio morphologies.


1977 ◽  
Vol 74 ◽  
pp. 247-257
Author(s):  
G. Burbidge

The topic that I have to introduce today is concerned with the question as to whether or not we can obtain any cosmological information from radio astronomy. Alternatively, we may ask “Where does radio astronomy have an impact on cosmology?” There are several areas that must be discussed. They are: 1)The discovery and interpretation of the microwave background radiation.2)The identification of powerful radio sources and the discovery that many of them have large redshifts. If we can prove that the large redshifts mean that the objects are at great distances, then we can use these radio sources as follows:(a)We can attempt to obtain a Hubble relation for the optical objects which are identified with radio galaxies;(b)We can look for a relation between the angular diameters of the radio sources and the redshifts of the optically identified objects and we can also look at relations between the angular diameter and the radio flux;(c)We can construct log N - log S curves and we can carry out luminosity volume tests.


1989 ◽  
Vol 240 (2) ◽  
pp. 225-254 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. N. Tadhunter ◽  
R. A. E. Fosbury ◽  
P. J. Quinn

2019 ◽  
Vol 623 ◽  
pp. A48 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Castignani ◽  
F. Combes ◽  
P. Salomé ◽  
C. Benoist ◽  
M. Chiaberge ◽  
...  

Context. Low luminosity radio galaxies (LLRGs) typically reside in dense megaparsec-scale environments and are often associated with brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs). They are an excellent tool to study the evolution of molecular gas reservoirs in giant ellipticals, even close to the active galactic nucleus. Aims. We investigate the role of dense megaparsec-scale environment in processing molecular gas in LLRGs in the cores of galaxy (proto-)clusters. To this aim we selected within the COSMOS and DES surveys a sample of five LLRGs at z = 0.4−2.6 that show evidence of ongoing star formation on the basis of their far-infrared (FIR) emission. Methods. We assembled and modeled the FIR-to-UV spectral energy distributions (SEDs) of the five radio sources to characterize their host galaxies in terms of stellar mass and star formation rate. We observed the LLRGs with the IRAM-30 m telescope to search for CO emission. We then searched for dense megaparsec-scale overdensities associated with the LLRGs using photometric redshifts of galaxies and the Poisson Probability Method, which we have upgraded using an approach based on the wavelet-transform (wPPM), to ultimately characterize the overdensity in the projected space and estimate the radio galaxy miscentering. Color-color and color-magnitude plots were then derived for the fiducial cluster members, selected using photometric redshifts. Results. Our IRAM-30 m observations yielded upper limits to the CO emission of the LLRGs, at z = 0.39, 0.61, 0.91, 0.97, and 2.6. For the most distant radio source, COSMOS-FRI 70 at z = 2.6, a hint of CO(7→6) emission is found at 2.2σ. The upper limits found for the molecular gas content M(H2)/M⋆ <  0.11, 0.09, 1.8, 1.5, and 0.29, respectively, and depletion time τdep ≲ (0.2−7) Gyr of the five LLRGs are overall consistent with the corresponding values of main sequence field galaxies. Our SED modeling implies large stellar-mass estimates in the range log(M⋆/M⊙) = 10.9−11.5, typical for giant ellipticals. Both our wPPM analysis and the cross-matching of the LLRGs with existing cluster/group catalogs suggest that the megaparsec-scale overdensities around our LLRGs are rich (≲1014 M⊙) groups and show a complex morphology. The color-color and color-magnitude plots suggest that the LLRGs are consistent with being star forming and on the high-luminosity tail of the red sequence. The present study thus increases the still limited statistics of distant cluster core galaxies with CO observations. Conclusions. The radio galaxies of this work are excellent targets for ALMA as well as next-generation telescopes such as the James Webb Space Telescope.


1999 ◽  
Vol 194 ◽  
pp. 241-245
Author(s):  
Philip Best ◽  
Huub Röttgering ◽  
Malcolm Longair

The results of a deep spectroscopic campaign on powerful radio galaxies with redshifts z ˜ 1, to investigate in detail their emission line gas properties, are presented. Both the 2-dimensional velocity structure of the [OII] 3727 emission line and the ionisation state of the gas are found to be strongly dependent upon the linear size (age) of the radio source in a manner indicative of the emission line properties of small (young) radio sources being dominated by the passage of the radio source shocks. The consequences of this evolution throughout the few x107 year lifetime of the radio source are discussed, particularly with relation to the alignment of the UV–optical continuum emission of these objects along their radio axis, the nature of which shows similar evolution.


1989 ◽  
Vol 340 ◽  
pp. L9 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. F. Mirabel ◽  
D. B. Sanders ◽  
I. Kazes

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