The evolution of the Fundamental Plane of radio galaxies from z~0.5 to the present day
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), James, S. Dunlop (3) ((1) Hertfordshire, (2) Herzberg Institute of Astrophysics, (3), IfA, Edinburgh, (4) Oxford, (5) UT Austin)

TL;DR
This study investigates how the Fundamental Plane of radio galaxies evolves from redshift ~0.5 to today, revealing differences between low- and high-luminosity types and suggesting size evolution as a key factor.
Contribution
It provides new spectroscopic data and analysis showing that the Fundamental Plane's evolution involves multiple factors, with size evolution playing a dominant role.
Findings
Low-luminosity FRI radio galaxies align with the local Fundamental Plane after passive evolution correction.
High-luminosity FRII radio galaxies deviate from the local Fundamental Plane at z~0.5.
Evidence suggests a correlation between host galaxy velocity dispersion and radio luminosity.
Abstract
We present deep spectroscopic data for a 24-object subsample of our full 41-object z~0.5 radio galaxy sample in order to investigate the evolution of the Fundamental Plane of radio galaxies. We find that the low-luminosity, FRI-type, radio galaxies in our sample are consistent with the local Fundamental Plane of radio galaxies defined by Bettoni et al. when corrected for simple passive evolution of their stellar populations. However, we find that the higher luminosity, FRII-type radio galaxies are inconsistent with the local Fundamental Plane if only passive evolution is considered, and find evidence for a rotation in the Fundamental Plane at z~0.5 when compared with the local relation. We show that neither passive evolution, nor a mass-dependent evolution in the mass-to-light ratio, nor an evolution in the size of the host galaxies can, by themselves, plausibly explain the observed…
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