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Beyond Simple AGN Unification with Chandra-observed 3CRR Sources

Authors :
Kuraszkiewicz, Joanna
Wilkes, Belinda J.
Atanas, Adam
Buchner, Johannes
McDowell, Jonathan C.
Willner, S. P.
Ashby, Matthew L. N.
Azadi, Mojegan
Barthel, Peter
Haas, Martin
Worrall, Diana M.
Birkinshaw, Mark
Antonucci, Robert
Chini, Rolf
Fazio, Giovanni G.
Lawrence, Charles
Ogle, Patrick
Kuraszkiewicz, Joanna
Wilkes, Belinda J.
Atanas, Adam
Buchner, Johannes
McDowell, Jonathan C.
Willner, S. P.
Ashby, Matthew L. N.
Azadi, Mojegan
Barthel, Peter
Haas, Martin
Worrall, Diana M.
Birkinshaw, Mark
Antonucci, Robert
Chini, Rolf
Fazio, Giovanni G.
Lawrence, Charles
Ogle, Patrick
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Low-frequency radio selection finds radio-bright galaxies regardless of the amount of obscuration by gas and dust. We report \chandra\ observations of a complete 178~MHz-selected, and so orientation unbiased, sample of 44 $0.5<z<1$ 3CRR sources. The sample is comprised of quasars and narrow-line radio galaxies (NLRGs) with similar radio luminosities, and the radio structure serves as both an age and an orientation indicator. Consistent with Unification, intrinsic obscuration (measured by \nh, X-ray hardness ratio, and X-ray luminosity) generally increases with inclination. However, the sample includes a population not seen in high-$z$ 3CRR sources: NLRGs viewed at intermediate inclination angles with \nh~$<10^{22}$~cm$^{-2}$. Multiwavelength analysis suggests these objects have lower $L/L_{\rm Edd}$ than typical NLRGs at similar orientation. Thus both orientation and $L/L_{\rm Edd}$ are important, and a "radiation-regulated Unification" provides a better explanation of the sample's observed properties. In comparison with the 3CRR sample at $1<z<2$, our lower-redshift sample shows a higher fraction of Compton-thin NLRGs (45\% vs.\ 29\%) but similar Compton-thick fraction (20\%), implying a larger covering factor of Compton-thin material at intermediate viewing angles and so a more "puffed-up" torus atmosphere. We posit that this is due to a range of $L/L_{\rm Edd}$ extending to lower values in this sample. In contrast, at high redshifts the narrower range and high $L/L_{\rm Edd}$ values allowed orientation (and so simple Unification) to dominate the sample's observed properties.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1312083224
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847.1538-4357.abf3c0