Pair-matching of radio-loud and radio-quiet AGNs
D. Kozie\l-Wierzbowska (1), G. Stasi\'nska (2), N. Vale Asari (3), M., Sikora (4), E. Goettems (3), A. W\'ojtowicz (1) ((1) Jagiellonian University,, Poland, (2) LUTH, Observatoire de Paris, France, (3) UFSC, Brazil, (4) CAMK,, Poland)

TL;DR
This study compares host galaxy properties of radio-loud and radio-quiet AGNs, revealing that RL AGNs are mainly in ellipticals and RQ in later types, suggesting different magnetic flux development scenarios.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic comparison of host galaxy characteristics of RL and RQ AGNs matched by key parameters, highlighting differences in galaxy types and implications for magnetic flux origins.
Findings
RL AGNs are mostly in elliptical galaxies.
RQ AGNs are mainly in later-type galaxies.
Interaction signatures are similar in both groups.
Abstract
Active galactic nuclei (AGNs) are known to cover an extremely broad range of radio luminosities and the spread of their radio-loudness is very large at any value of the Eddington ratio. This implies very diverse jet production efficiencies which can result from the spread of the black hole spins and magnetic fluxes. Magnetic fluxes can be developed stochastically in the innermost zones of accretion discs, or can be advected to the central regions prior to the AGN phase. In the latter case there could be systematic differences between the properties of galaxies hosting radio-loud (RL) and radio-quiet (RQ) AGNs. In the former case the differences should be negligible for objects having the same Eddington ratio. To study the problem we decided to conduct a comparison study of host galaxy properties of RL and RQ AGNs. In this study we selected type II AGNs from SDSS spectroscopic…
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