Ubiquitous radio emission in quasars: predominant AGN origin and a connection to jets, dust and winds
G. Calistro-Rivera, D. M. Alexander, C. M. Harrison, V. A. Fawcett, P. N. Best, W.L. Williams, M. J. Hardcastle, D. J. Rosario, D. J. B. Smith, M. I. Arnaudova, E. Escott, G. G\"urkan, R. Kondapally, G. Miley, L. K. Morabito, J. Petley, I. Prandoni, H.J.A. R\"ottgering, B.-H. Yue

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that the majority of radio emission in quasars at z<2.5 originates from AGN activity, with a strong link to dust reddening, outflows, and jet interactions, highlighting the role of jets and winds in quasar feedback.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis showing that compact radio jets interacting with dusty environments are the main source of radio emission in quasars, connecting radio properties with dust and wind features.
Findings
Radio detection fractions up to 94% in quasars.
Radio emission primarily from AGN, not star formation.
Enhanced outflows in red quasars linked to radio emission.
Abstract
We present a comprehensive study of the physical origin of radio emission in optical quasars at redshifts z < 2.5. We focus particularly on the associations between compact radio emission, dust reddening, and outflows identified in our earlier work. Leveraging the deepest low-frequency radio data available to date (LoTSS Deep DR1), we achieve radio detection fractions of up to 94%, demonstrating the virtual ubiquity of radio emission in quasars, and a continuous distribution in radio loudness. Through our analysis of radio properties, combined with spectral energy distribution modeling of multiwavelength photometry, we establish that the primary source of radio emission in quasars is the AGN, rather than star formation. Modeling the dust reddening of the accretion disk emission shows a continuous increase in radio detection in quasars as a function of the reddening parameter E(B-V),…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
