Cosmic downsizing of powerful radio galaxies to low radio luminosities
E. E. Rigby, J. Argyle, P. N. Best, D. Rosario, H. J. A., R\"ottgering

TL;DR
This study investigates how the evolution of radio galaxy populations varies with luminosity, revealing a cosmic downsizing pattern where lower luminosity sources peak in space density at lower redshifts, similar to quasars.
Contribution
It extends the understanding of radio galaxy evolution to lower luminosities using a new faint radio sample and a model-free approach, confirming luminosity-dependent evolution down to $10^{24}$ W/Hz.
Findings
High-redshift decline persists at lower luminosities.
Peak redshift increases with luminosity above $10^{26}$ W/Hz.
Cosmic downsizing aligns with accretion mode transitions.
Abstract
At bright radio powers ( W/Hz) the space density of the most powerful sources peaks at higher redshift than that of their weaker counterparts. This paper establishes whether this luminosity-dependent evolution persists for sources an order of magnitude fainter than those previously studied, by measuring the steep--spectrum radio luminosity function (RLF) across the range W/Hz, out to high redshift. A grid-based modelling method is used, in which no assumptions are made about the RLF shape and high-redshift behaviour. The inputs to the model are the same as in Rigby et al. (2011): redshift distributions from radio source samples, together with source counts and determinations of the local luminosity function. However, to improve coverage of the radio power vs. redshift plane at the lowest radio powers, a new faint radio…
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