Back to Search Start Over

Luminous giants populate the dense Cosmic Web: The radio luminosity-environmental density relation for radio galaxies in action

Authors :
Oei, Martijn S. S. L.
van Weeren, Reinout J.
Hardcastle, Martin J.
Gast, Aivin R. D. J. G. I. B.
Leclercq, Florent
Röttgering, Huub J. A.
Dabhade, Pratik
Shimwell, Tim W.
Botteon, Andrea
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Giant radio galaxies (GRGs, giant RGs, or giants) are megaparsec-scale, jet-driven outflows from accretion disks of supermassive black holes, and represent the most extreme pathway by which galaxies can impact the Cosmic Web around them. A long-standing but unresolved question is why giants are so much larger than other radio galaxies. It has been proposed that, in addition to having higher jet powers than most RGs, giants might live in especially low-density Cosmic Web environments. In this work, we aim to test this hypothesis by pinpointing Local Universe giants and other RGs in physically principled, Bayesian large-scale structure reconstructions. More specifically, we localised a LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey (LoTSS) DR2-dominated sample of luminous ($l_\nu(\nu = 150\ \mathrm{MHz}) \geq 10^{24}\ \mathrm{W\ Hz^{-1}}$) giants and a control sample of LoTSS DR1 RGs, both with spectroscopic redshifts up to $z_\mathrm{max} = 0.16$, in the BORG SDSS Cosmic Web reconstructions. We measured the Cosmic Web density for each RG; for the control sample, we then quantified the relation between RG radio luminosity and Cosmic Web density. With the BORG SDSS tidal tensor, we also measured for each RG whether the gravitational dynamics of its Cosmic Web environment resemble those of clusters, filaments, sheets, or voids. Luminous giants populate large-scale environments that tend to be denser than those of general RGs. This shows that -- at least at high jet powers -- low-density environments are no prerequisite for giant growth. This result is corroborated by gravitational dynamics classification and a cluster catalogue crossmatching analysis. This work presents more than a thousand inferred megaparsec-scale densities around radio galaxies. Our findings are consistent with the view that giants are regular, rather than mechanistically special, members of the radio galaxy population.<br />Comment: 28 pages, 21 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in Astronomy & Astrophysics

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2404.17776
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/202347115