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Quasar Feedback Survey: molecular gas affected by central outflows and by ~10 kpc radio lobes reveal dual feedback effects in 'radio quiet' quasars

Authors :
Girdhar, A.
Harrison, C. M.
Mainieri, V.
Aranda, R. Fernández
Alexander, D. M.
Battaia, F. Arrigoni
Bianchin, M.
Rivera, G. Calistro
Circosta, C.
Costa, T.
Edge, A. C.
Farina, E. P.
Kakkad, D.
Kharb, P.
Molyneux, S. J.
Mukherjee, D.
Njeri, A.
S., Silpa
Venturi, G.
Ward, S. R.
Girdhar, A.
Harrison, C. M.
Mainieri, V.
Aranda, R. Fernández
Alexander, D. M.
Battaia, F. Arrigoni
Bianchin, M.
Rivera, G. Calistro
Circosta, C.
Costa, T.
Edge, A. C.
Farina, E. P.
Kakkad, D.
Kharb, P.
Molyneux, S. J.
Mukherjee, D.
Njeri, A.
S., Silpa
Venturi, G.
Ward, S. R.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

We present a study of molecular gas, traced via CO (3-2) from ALMA data, of four z< 0.2, `radio quiet', type 2 quasars (log [L(bol)/(erg/s)] = 45.3 - 46.2; log [L(1.4 GHz)/(W/Hz)] = 23.7 - 24.3). Targets were selected to have extended radio lobes (>= 10 kpc), and compact, moderate-power jets (1 - 10 kpc; log [Pjet/(erg/s)]= 43.2 - 43.7). All targets show evidence of central molecular outflows, or injected turbulence, within the gas disks (traced via high-velocity wing components in CO emission-line profiles). The inferred velocities (Vout = 250 - 440 km/s) and spatial scales (0.6 - 1.6 kpc), are consistent with those of other samples of luminous low-redshift AGN. In two targets, we observe extended molecular gas structures beyond the central disks, containing 9 - 53 % of the total molecular gas mass. These structures tend to be elongated, extending from the core, and wrap-around (or along) the radio lobes. Their properties are similar to the molecular gas filaments observed around radio lobes of, mostly `radio loud', Brightest Cluster Galaxies. They have: projected distances of 5 - 13 kpc; bulk velocities of 100 - 340 km/s; velocity dispersion of 30 - 130 km/s; inferred mass outflow rates of 4 - 20 Msolar/yr; and estimated kinetic powers of log [Ekin/(erg/s)]= 40.3 - 41.7. Our observations are consistent with simulations that suggest moderate-power jets can have a direct (but modest) impact on molecular gas on small scales, through direct jet-cloud interactions. Then, on larger scales, jet-cocoons can push gas aside. Both processes could contribute to the long-term regulation of star formation.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRAS; references updated; typos corrected

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1430701344
Document Type :
Electronic Resource