Brightest Cluster Galaxy Formation in the z=4.3 Protocluster SPT2349-56: Discovery of a Radio-Loud AGN
Scott C. Chapman, Ryley Hill, Manuel Aravena, Melanie Archipley, Arif, Babul, James Burgoyne, Rebecca E. A. Canning, Carlos De Breuck, Anthony H., Gonzalez, Christopher C. Hayward, Seon Woo Kim, Matt Malkan, Dan P. Marrone,, Vincent McIntyre, Eric Murphy, Emily Pass

TL;DR
This study detects a powerful radio-loud AGN in a high-redshift protocluster, revealing obscured SMBH growth and feedback effects in early galaxy cluster formation, with implications for understanding galaxy evolution in dense environments.
Contribution
First detection of a radio-loud AGN in the z=4.3 protocluster SPT2349-56, highlighting radio continuum as a key probe of obscured AGN in high-z environments.
Findings
Radio luminosity indicates an AGN, not star formation.
The AGN injects energy comparable to supernova feedback.
No other signs of AGN activity in SMGs apart from radio detection.
Abstract
We have observed the z=4.3 protocluster SPT2349-56 with ATCA with the aim of detecting radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGN) amongst the ~30 submillimeter galaxies identified in the structure. We detect the central complex of SMGs at 2.2\,GHz with a luminosity of L_2.2=(4.42pm0.56)x10^{25} W/Hz. The ASKAP also detects the source at 888 MHz, constraining the radio spectral index to alpha=-1.6pm0.3, consistent with ATCA non-detections at 5.5 and 9GHz, and implying L_1.4(rest)=(2.4pm0.3)x10^{26}W/Hz. This radio luminosity is about 100 times higher than expected from star formation, assuming the usual FIR-radio correlation, which is a clear indication of an AGN driven by a forming brightest cluster galaxy (BCG). None of the SMGs in SPT2349-56 show signs of AGN in any other diagnostics available to us (notably 12CO out to J=16, OH163um, CII/IR, and optical spectra), highlighting the radio…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
