Radio galaxies in ZFOURGE/NMBS: no difference in the properties of massive galaxies with and without radio-AGN out to z = 2.25
G. A. Rees, L. R. Spitler, R. P. Norris, M. J. Cowley, C. Papovich, K., Glazebrook, R. F. Quadri, C. M. S. Straatman, R. Allen, G. G. Kacprzak, I., Labbe, T. Nanayakkara, A. R. Tomczak, K.-V. Tran

TL;DR
This study investigates the properties of radio-loud AGN host galaxies up to z=2.25, finding no significant difference in star formation compared to non-AGN galaxies and suggesting radio-AGN may not suppress star formation.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the evolution and host galaxy properties of radio-AGN at high redshift, challenging previous low-redshift associations with quiescent hosts.
Findings
Radio-AGN hosts are mostly star-forming galaxies at z > 1.5.
Radio-AGN fraction remains constant across 0.25 ≤ z < 2.25.
Radio-AGN are rare below a stellar mass of 10^10.5 M_sun.
Abstract
In order to reproduce the high-mass end of the galaxy mass-distribution, some process must be responsible for the suppression of star-formation in the most massive of galaxies. Commonly Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) are invoked to fulfil this role, but the exact means by which they do so is still the topic of much debate, with studies finding evidence for both the suppression and enhancement of star-formation in AGN hosts. Using the ZFOURGE and NMBS galaxy surveys, we investigate the host galaxy properties of a mass-limited (M 10 M), high-luminosity (L 10 W Hz) sample of radio-loud Active Galactic Nuclei to a redshift of z = 2.25. In contrast to low redshift studies, which associate radio-AGN activity with quiescent hosts, we find that the majority of z 1.5 radio-AGN are hosted by star-forming galaxies. Indeed, the stellar…
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