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The Infrared Medium-Deep Survey II: How to Trigger Radio-AGN? Hints from Their Environments

Authors :
Karouzos, Marios
Im, Myungshin
Kim, Jae-Woo
Lee, Seong-Kook
Chapman, Scott
Jeon, Yiseul
Choi, Changsu
Hong, Jueun
Hyun, Minhee
Jun, Hyunsung David
Kim, Dohyeong
Kim, Yongjung
Kim, Ji Hoon
Kim, Duho
Pak, Soojong
Park, Won-Kee
Taak, Yoon Chan
Yoon, Yongmin
Edge, Alastair
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Activity at the centers of galaxies, during which the central supermassive black hole is accreting material, is nowadays accepted to be rather ubiquitous and most probably a phase of every galaxy's evolution. It has been suggested that galactic mergers and interactions may be the culprits behind the triggering of nuclear activity. We use near-infrared data from the new Infrared Medium-Deep Survey (IMS) and the Deep eXtragalactic Survey (DXS) of the VIMOS-SA22 field and radio data at 1.4 GHz from the FIRST survey and a deep VLA survey to study the environments of radio-AGN over an area of ~25 sq. degrees and down to a radio flux limit of 0.1 mJy and a J-band magnitude of 23 mag AB. Radio-AGN are predominantly found in environments similar to those of control galaxies at similar redshift, J-band magnitude, and U-R rest-frame absolute color. However, a sub-population of radio-AGN is found in environments up to 100 times denser than their control sources. We thus preclude merging as the dominant triggering mechanism of radio-AGN. Through the fitting of the broadband spectral energy distribution of radio-AGN in the least and most dense environments, we find that those in the least dense environments show higher radio-loudness, higher star formation efficiencies, and higher accretion rates, typical of the so-called high-excitation radio-AGN. These differences tend to disappear at z>1. We interpret our results in terms of a different triggering mechanism for these sources that is driven by mass-loss through winds of young stars created during the observed ongoing star formation.<br />Comment: 22 pages, 19 figures, accepted for publication in the ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1410.4200
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0004-637X/797/1/26