# The VLA-COSMOS 3~GHz Large Project: Cosmic evolution of radio AGN and   implications for radio-mode feedback since z~5

**Authors:** V. Smolcic, M. Novak, I. Delvecchio, L. Ceraj, M. Bondi, J. Delhaize,, S. Marchesi, E. Murphy, E. Schinnerer, E. Vardoulaki, G. Zamorani

arXiv: 1705.07090 · 2017-06-14

## TL;DR

This study analyzes the evolution of radio AGN from redshift 0 to 5 using deep radio data, estimating their kinetic feedback and its role in galaxy formation, confirming its significance but highlighting existing uncertainties.

## Contribution

It provides the first comprehensive measurement of the cosmic evolution of radio AGN kinetic luminosity density up to z~5, linking observations with galaxy evolution models.

## Key findings

- Radio AGN number and luminosity densities peak at z~1.5.
- Kinetic luminosity density may balance hot gas cooling since z~5.
- Supports radio-mode feedback as a key process in galaxy evolution.

## Abstract

Based on a sample of over 1,800 radio AGN at redshifts out to z~5, which have typical stellar masses within ~3x(10^{10}-10^{11}) Msol, and 3 GHz radio data in the COSMOS field, we derived the 1.4 GHz radio luminosity functions for radio AGN (L_1.4GHz ~ 10^{22}-10^{27} W/Hz) out to z~5. We constrained the evolution of this population via continuous models of pure density and pure luminosity evolutions, and we found best-fit parametrizations of Phi*~(1+z)^{(2.00+/-0.18)-(0.60+/-0.14)z}, and L*~(1+z)^{(2.88+/-0.82)-(0.84+/-0.34)z}, respectively, with a turnover in number and luminosity densities of the population at z~1.5. We converted 1.4 GHz luminosity to kinetic luminosity taking uncertainties of the scaling relation used into account. We thereby derived the cosmic evolution of the kinetic luminosity density provided by the AGN and compared this luminosity density to the radio-mode AGN feedback assumed in the Semi-Analytic Galaxy Evolution (SAGE) model, i.e., to the redshift evolution of the central supermassive black hole accretion luminosity taken in the model as the source of heating that offsets the energy losses of the cooling, hot halo gas, and thereby limits further stellar mass growth of massive galaxies. We find that the kinetic luminosity exerted by our radio AGN may be high enough to balance the radiative cooling of the hot gas at each cosmic epoch since z~5. However, although our findings support the idea of radio-mode AGN feedback as a cosmologically relevant process in massive galaxy formation, many simplifications in both the observational and semi-analytic approaches still remain and need to be resolved before robust conclusions can be reached.

## Full text

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## Figures

18 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.07090/full.md

## References

84 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.07090/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1705.07090