Radio and optical orientations of galaxies
R. A. Battye, I. W. A. Browne

TL;DR
This study reveals strong correlations between optical and radio orientations in galaxies, showing different alignment patterns for early and late types, which provide insights into galaxy structure and formation history.
Contribution
It uncovers distinct alignment patterns of radio and optical axes in galaxies, linking these to galaxy type, radio loudness, and underlying structural and kinematic properties.
Findings
Late-type galaxies align with their radio emission at 0°
Early-type galaxies show radio emission aligned with the minor axis
Radio-loudness influences the strength of orientation correlations
Abstract
We investigate the correlations between optical and radio isophotal position angles for 14302 SDSS galaxies with magnitudes brighter than 18 and which have been associated with extended FIRST radio sources. We identify two separate populations of galaxies using the colour, concentration and their principal components. Surprisingly strong statistical alignments are found: late-type galaxies are overwhelmingly biased towards a position angle differences of and early-type galaxies to . The late-type alignment can be easily understood in terms of the standard picture in which the radio emission is intimately related to areas of recent star-formation. In early-type galaxies the radio emission is expected to be driven by accretion on to a nuclear black hole. We argue that the observed correlation of the radio axis with the minor axis of the large-scale stellar…
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