Discovery of rare double-lobe radio galaxies hosted in spiral galaxies
Veeresh Singh, C. H. Ishwara-Chandra, Jonathan Sievers, Yogesh, Wadadekar, Matt Hilton, Alexandre Beelen

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of four rare spiral-host double-lobe radio galaxies, challenging the typical association of such radio structures with elliptical hosts and suggesting multiple formation mechanisms.
Contribution
It presents the first identification of a spiral-host double-lobe radio galaxy, expanding understanding of galaxy types capable of hosting such radio features.
Findings
Four spiral-host double-lobe radio galaxies identified
Host galaxies have active star formation and massive SMBHs
Radio morphologies resemble FR-II radio galaxies
Abstract
Double-lobe radio galaxies in the local Universe have traditionally been found to be hosted in elliptical or lenticular galaxies. We report the discovery of four spiral-host double-lobe radio galaxies (J0836+0532, J1159+5820, J1352+3126 and J1649+2635) that are discovered by cross-matching a large sample of 187005 spiral galaxies from SDSS DR7 to the full catalogues of FIRST and NVSS. J0836+0532 is reported for the first time. The host galaxies are forming stars at an average rate of 1.7 10 M yr and possess Super Massive Black Holes (SMBHs) with masses of a few times 10 M. Their radio morphologies are similar to FR-II radio galaxies with total projected linear sizes ranging from 86 kpc to 420 kpc, but their total 1.4 GHz radio luminosities are only in the range 10 10 W Hz. We propose that the formation of spiral-host…
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