Here Be SDRAGNs - Spiral Galaxies Hosting Large Double Radio Sources
Jean Tate, William C. Keel, Michael O'Keeffe, O. Ivy Wong, Heinz Andernach, Julie K. Banfield, Alexei Moiseev, Aleksandrina Smirnova, Arina Arshinova, Eugene Malygin, Elena Shablovinskaya, Roman Uklein, Stanislav Shabala, Ray Norris, Brooke D. Simmons, Rebecca Smethurst

TL;DR
This study identifies and characterizes a rare class of spiral galaxies hosting large double radio sources, revealing their structural, spectral, and environmental properties, and expanding understanding of galaxy evolution and active galactic nuclei.
Contribution
First comprehensive sample and analysis of spiral galaxies hosting large double radio sources, including optical spectra and host galaxy properties.
Findings
15 new high-probability SDRAGNs identified.
SDRAGNs are mostly edge-on, with FR II structures and optical pseudobulges.
Radio-jet axes are preferentially near galaxy disk poles.
Abstract
We present a sample of large double radio sources hosted by spiral galaxies (Spiral Double Radio Active Galactic Nuclei, SDRAGNs). Candidates were selected during Radio Galaxy Zoo, and refined using Sloan Digital Sky Survey images. The most promising were targeted in the Zoo Gems Hubble Space Telescope program, yielding images for 36 candidates. We assess the likelihood of each spiral galaxy being the genuine host of the radio emission finding 15 new high-probability SDRAGNs. SDRAGN hosts are seen preferentially close to edge-on. SDRAGNs predominantly show FR II radio structures and optical pseudobulges. Accounting for sample selection effects, the radio-jet axes lie preferentially near the poles of the galaxy disks; we find a constant probability distribution for intrinsic pole-jet angles < 30 degrees, ramping to zero at 60 degrees. We have obtained optical spectra for all these new…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
