Evidence of Gas Depletion in Quasars with Moderate Radio Emission
Yuhan Wen, Ran Wang, Luis C. Ho, Jinyi Shangguan, Ezequiel Treister, Guodong Li, Franz E. Bauer

TL;DR
This study shows that quasars with moderate radio emission have less cold gas and stronger outflows, indicating more effective AGN feedback in these systems compared to radio-quiet or radio-loud quasars.
Contribution
It provides evidence that moderate radio activity in quasars correlates with gas depletion and enhanced outflows, revealing a nuanced role of radio emission in AGN feedback.
Findings
Radio-detected RQ quasars have 0.3 dex lower gas and dust masses.
Higher outflow velocity and fraction in radio-detected RQ quasars.
Moderate radio activity correlates with more efficient gas depletion.
Abstract
The energy released by active galactic nuclei (AGNs) is considered to have a profound impact on the cold gas properties of their host galaxies, potentially heating or removing the gas and further suppressing star formation. To understand the feedback from AGN radio activity, we investigate its impacts on the cold gas reservoirs in AGNs with different radio activity levels. We construct a quasar sample with a mean and a mean , all with Herschel detections to enable estimates of the total gas mass through the galactic dust continuum emission. The sample is then cross-matched with radio catalogs and divided into radio loud (RL) quasars, radio-detected radio quiet (RQ) quasars and radio-undetected quasars based on their radio loudness. Through spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting, we find the radio-detected RQ quasars exhibit…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
