Fundamental differences in the radio properties of red and blue quasars: kiloparsec-scale structures revealed by e-MERLIN
D.J. Rosario (Durham/CEA), D.M. Alexander (Durham/CEA), J. Moldon (IAA, CSIC, Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics), L. Klindt (Durham/CEA), A.P., Thomson (Jodrell Bank Centre for Astrophysics), L. Morabito (Durham/CEA),, V.A. Fawcett (Durham/CEA), C.M. Harrison (Newcastle U.)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution e-MERLIN imaging to reveal that red quasars have a higher incidence of compact, kiloparsec-scale radio structures compared to normal blue quasars, suggesting different extended emission mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed imaging evidence linking red quasars' excess radio emission to galaxy-scale structures, distinct from nuclear activity.
Findings
Red quasars show more extended kpc-scale radio emission.
Excess radio emission is confined to galaxy scales (< 10 kpc).
Similar incidence of large-scale jets and lobes in red and blue quasars.
Abstract
Red quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) are a subset of the quasar population with colours consistent with reddening due to intervening dust. Recent work has demonstrated that red QSOs show special radio properties that fundamentally distinguish them from normal blue QSOs, specifically a higher incidence of low-power radio emission (1.4 GHz luminosities L - W Hz) that is physically compact when imaged by arcsecond-resolution radio surveys such as FIRST. In this work, we present e-MERLIN imaging of a set of intermediate-redshift (), luminous (bolometric luminosities L - erg s) red and normal QSOs carefully selected to have radio properties that span the range over which red QSOs show the most divergence from the general population. With an angular resolution better than FIRST, we resolve…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
