Accretion mode versus radio morphology in the LOFAR Deep Fields
B. Mingo, J. H. Croston, P. N. Best, K. J. Duncan, M. J. Hardcastle,, R. Kondapally, I. Prandoni, J. Sabater, T. W. Shimwell, W. L. Williams, R. D., Baldi, M. Bonato, M. Bondi, P. Dabhade, G. G\"urkan, J. Ineson, M., Magliocchetti, G. Miley, J. C. S. Pierce

TL;DR
This study investigates the complex relationship between accretion modes and radio morphologies in active galaxies, revealing that both RI and RE systems can produce FRII structures across various luminosities, with host galaxy properties influencing these features.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of 286 radio galaxies, demonstrating that accretion mode and radio morphology are indirectly related through host galaxy characteristics.
Findings
Two-thirds of luminous FRIIs are radiatively inefficient.
Both RI and RE systems can produce FRII structures at all luminosities.
Host galaxy properties influence the likelihood of FRI or FRII morphology.
Abstract
Radio-loud active galaxies have two accretion modes [radiatively inefficient (RI) and radiatively efficient (RE)], with distinct optical and infrared signatures, and two jet dynamical behaviours, which in arcsec- to arcmin-resolution radio surveys manifest primarily as centre- or edge-brightened structures [Fanaroff-Riley (FR) class I and II]. The nature of the relationship between accretion mode and radio morphology (FR class) has been the subject of long debate. We present a comprehensive investigation of this relationship for a sample of 286 well-resolved radio galaxies in the LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey Deep Fields (LoTSS-Deep) first data release, for which robust morphological and accretion mode classifications have been made. We find that two-thirds of luminous FRII radio galaxies are RI, and identify no significant differences in the visual appearance or source dynamic range…
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.
Code & Models
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
