On the Populations of Radio Galaxies with Extended Morphology at z<0.3
Yen-Ting Lin (1), Yue Shen (2), Michael Strauss (3), Gordon Richards, (4), and Ragnhild Lunnan (2) ((1) IPMU, (2) CfA, (3) Princeton, (4) Drexel)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the physical properties and morphology of 1040 radio galaxies at z<0.3, revealing a dichotomy influenced by SMBH accretion rates that affect radio morphology and host galaxy environment.
Contribution
It demonstrates that SMBH accretion rates primarily determine radio galaxy morphology and host galaxy properties, refining the classical FR I/II classification based on physical parameters.
Findings
High accretion rate RGs have powerful jets and distinct emission lines.
LD sources with r>0.8 and high line luminosity are in lower mass, sparse environments.
Different accretion regimes produce varied radio morphologies.
Abstract
Extended extragalactic radio sources have traditionally been classified into FR I and II types, based on the ratio r of the separation S between the brightest regions on either sides of the host galaxy and the total size T of the radio source. Here we examine the distribution of various physical properties as a function of r of 1040 luminous radio galaxies (RGs) at z<0.3 from the SDSS, NVSS, and FIRST. About 2/3 of the RGs are lobe-dominated (LD), and 1/3 have prominent jets. If we follow the original definition of the FR types (a division based solely on r), FR I and FR II RGs overlap in their host galaxy properties. However, the rare, LD sources with r>0.8 AND OIII5007 line luminosity >10^6 Lsun are markedly different on average from the rest of the RGs, in the sense that they are hosted in lower mass galaxies, live in relatively sparse environments, and have higher accretion rates…
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