Radio AGN in the local universe: unification, triggering and evolution
Clive Tadhunter

TL;DR
This review discusses the properties, triggering mechanisms, and evolution of radio AGN in the local universe, emphasizing their host galaxy characteristics, triggering processes like mergers, and the diversity in their observed features.
Contribution
It synthesizes current understanding of radio AGN classification, triggering, and evolution, highlighting the roles of galaxy mergers and accretion rates in shaping their properties.
Findings
Radio AGN diversity explained by orientation, accretion, variability.
Strong-line radio galaxies often triggered by galaxy mergers.
Weak-line radio galaxies show gradual fueling via low-rate gas accretion.
Abstract
Associated with one of the most important forms of active galactic nucleus (AGN) feedback, and showing a strong preference for giant elliptical host galaxies, radio AGN (L_1.4GHz > 10^24 W Hz^-1) are a key sub-class of the overall AGN population. Here I review our current state of understanding of the population of radio AGN at low and intermediate redshifts (z < 0.7), concentrating on their AGN and host galaxy properties, and covering three interlocking themes: the classification of radio AGN and its interpretation; the triggering and fuelling of the jet and AGN activity; and the evolution of the host galaxies. I show that much of the observed diversity in the AGN properties of radio AGN can be explained in terms of a combination of orientation/anisotropy, mass accretion rate, and variability effects. The detailed morphologies of the host galaxies are consistent with the triggering of…
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