Radio Loud and Radio Quiet Quasars
K. I. Kellermann, J. J. Condon, A. E. Kimball, R. A. Perley, and, Zeljko Ivezic

TL;DR
This study uses 6 GHz JVLA observations of 178 low-redshift QSOs to distinguish radio-loud and radio-quiet types, revealing differences in radio luminosity, host galaxy star formation, and challenging simple unified models based solely on orientation.
Contribution
It provides a detailed radio luminosity classification of QSOs and shows that intrinsic properties influence radio loudness, not just orientation effects.
Findings
20% of QSOs are radio-loud with AGN-powered emission.
Most radio-quiet QSOs have host galaxy star formation as the radio source.
Radio luminosity function and extended emission challenge simple unified models.
Abstract
We discuss 6 GHz JVLA observations covering a volume-limited sample of 178 low redshift () optically selected QSOs. Our 176 radio detections fall into two clear categories: (1) About \% are radio-loud QSOs (RLQs) having spectral luminosities primarily generated in the active galactic nucleus (AGN) responsible for the excess optical luminosity that defines a \emph{bona fide} QSO. (2) The radio-quiet QSOs (RQQs) have and radio sizes , and we suggest that the bulk of their radio emission is powered by star formation in their host galaxies. "Radio silent" QSOs () are rare, so most RQQ host galaxies form stars faster than the Milky Way; they are not "red and dead" ellipticals. Earlier radio…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
