Evidence of different star formation histories for high- and low-luminosity radio galaxies
Peter D. Herbert (1), Matt J. Jarvis (1), Chris J. Willott (2), Ross, J. McLure (3), Ewan Mitchell (4), Steve Rawlings (4), Gary J. Hill (5) and, James S. Dunlop (3) ((1) Hertfordshire, (2) Herzberg Institute of, Astrophysics, (3) IfA, Edinburgh, (4) Oxford, (5) UT Austin)

TL;DR
This study compares stellar populations of 24 radio galaxies at z~0.5, revealing that high-luminosity and high-excitation galaxies have younger stars and recent star formation, unlike their low-luminosity, low-excitation counterparts.
Contribution
It provides new evidence linking radio luminosity, spectral classification, and morphology to star formation histories in radio galaxies.
Findings
Low-luminosity radio galaxies have older stellar populations.
High-excitation galaxies show signs of recent star formation.
Morphology correlates with stellar population age.
Abstract
We present the results of our investigation into the stellar populations of 24 radio galaxies at z~0.5 drawn from four complete, low-frequency selected radio surveys. We use the strength of the 4000A break as an indicator of recent star formation, and compare this with radio luminosity, optical spectral classification and morphological classification. We find evidence of different star formation histories for high- and low-luminosity radio sources; our group of low radio luminosity sources (typically FRI-type sources) has systematically older stellar populations than the higher radio luminosity group. Our sample is also fairly well divided by optical spectral classification. We find that galaxies classified as having low excitation spectra (LEGs) possess older stellar populations than high excitation line objects (HEGs), with the HEGs showing evidence for recent star formation. We also…
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