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Why z > 1 radio-loud galaxies are commonly located in proto-clusters

Authors :
Hatch, N. A.
Wylezalek, D.
Kurk, J. D.
Stern, D.
De Breuck, C.
Jarvis, M. J.
Galametz, A.
Gonzalez, A. H.
Hartley, W. G.
Mortlock, A.
Seymour, N.
Stevens, J. A.
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
arXiv, 2014.

Abstract

Distant powerful radio-loud active galactic nuclei (RLAGN) tend to reside in dense environments and are commonly found in proto-clusters at z > 1.3. We examine whether this occurs because RLAGN are hosted by massive galaxies, which preferentially reside in rich environments. We compare the environments of powerful RLAGN at 1.3 < z < 3.2 from the CARLA survey to a sample of radio-quiet galaxies matched in mass and redshift. We find the environments of RLAGN are significantly denser than those of radio-quiet galaxies, implying that not more than 50% of massive galaxies in this epoch can host powerful radio-loud jets. This is not an observational selection effect as we find no evidence to suggest it is easier to observe the radio emission when the galaxy resides in a dense environment. We therefore suggest that the dense Mpc-scale environment fosters the formation of a radio-jet from an AGN. We show that the number density of potential RLAGN host galaxies is consistent with every > 10^14 solar mass cluster having experienced powerful radio-loud feedback of duration ~60 Myr during 1.3 < z < 3.2. This feedback could heat the intracluster medium to the extent of 0.5-1 keV per gas particle, which could limit the amount of gas available for further star formation in the proto-cluster galaxies.<br />Accepted for publication in MNRAS

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........ce220ecbc88f3fd2ce83884827024abc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.48550/arxiv.1409.1218