Ionised gas outflows over the radio AGN life cycle
Pranav Kukreti, Raffaella Morganti, Clive Tadhunter, Francesco, Santoro

TL;DR
This study investigates how ionised gas outflows driven by radio AGN evolve over the AGN's life cycle, revealing that outflows are strongest in young, peaked-spectrum sources and diminish as the source matures.
Contribution
It introduces a novel analysis linking radio spectral shape to ionised gas outflows, demonstrating evolution of feedback effects with AGN development.
Findings
Outflows are broad and strong in peaked-spectrum (young) sources.
No outflows detected in non-peaked (more evolved) sources.
Candidate restarted AGN show more disturbed gas kinematics.
Abstract
Feedback from AGN is known to affect the host galaxy's evolution. In radio AGN, one manifestation of feedback is seen in gas outflows. However, it is still not well understood whether the effect of feedback evolves with the radio AGN life cycle. In this study, we investigate this link using the radio spectral shape as a proxy for the evolutionary stage of the AGN. We used [OIII] emission line spectra to trace the presence of outflows on the ionised gas. Using a sample of uniformly selected 129 radio AGN with W Hz, and a mean stacking analysis of the [OIII] profile, we conclude that the ionised gas outflow is linked to the radio spectral shape, and it evolves with the evolution of the radio source. We find that sources with a peak in their radio spectra (optically thick), on average, drive a broad outflow ( km…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
