Are luminous radio-loud active galactic nuclei triggered by galaxy interactions?
C. Ramos Almeida, P. S. Bessiere, C. Tadhunter, P. G., P\'erez-Gonz\'alez, G. Barro, K. J. Inskip, R. Morganti, J. Holt, D., Dicken

TL;DR
This study compares the optical morphologies of radio-loud active galactic nuclei with quiescent galaxies, finding that galaxy interactions are more common and intense in hosts of active nuclei, suggesting a link between mergers and radio activity.
Contribution
It provides evidence that powerful radio galaxies are often associated with recent or ongoing mergers, highlighting the role of galaxy interactions in triggering radio-loud AGN activity.
Findings
High fraction of disturbed morphologies in radio galaxy hosts
Disturbed features are brighter in radio hosts than in quiescent galaxies
Only a small subset of disturbed galaxies host powerful radio sources
Abstract
We present the results of a comparison between the optical morphologies of a complete sample of 46 southern 2Jy radio galaxies at intermediate redshifts (0.05<z<0.7) and those of two control samples of quiescent early-type galaxies: 55 ellipticals at redshifts z<0.01 from the Observations of Bright Ellipticals at Yale (OBEY) survey, and 107 early-type galaxies at redshifts 0.2<z<0.7 in the Extended Groth Strip (EGS). Based on these comparisons, we discuss the role of galaxy interactions in the triggering of powerful radio galaxies (PRGs). We find that a significant fraction of quiescent ellipticals at low and intermediate redshifts show evidence for disturbed morphologies at relatively high surface brightness levels, which are likely the result of past or on-going galaxy interactions. However, the morphological features detected in the galaxy hosts of the PRGs (e.g. tidal tails, shells,…
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