A striking excess of red quasars with steep radio spectral slopes: a dusty blow-out phase revealed through AGN-driven shocks?
Ciera L. Sargent, David M. Alexander, Claire L. Greenwell, Victoria A. Fawcett, Leah K. Morabito, Chris M. Harrison, Moun Meenakshi, Ryan C. Hickox

TL;DR
This study reveals that red quasars often exhibit steep radio spectral slopes due to shocks from AGN-driven winds interacting with dusty environments, indicating a dusty blow-out phase in galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first large-scale comparison showing excess steep-spectrum radio emission in red quasars linked to dusty environments and wind-shock interactions.
Findings
Red quasars show a higher incidence of steep-spectrum compact radio emission.
The excess steep radio emission correlates with dust extinction levels.
Most dusty quasars with steep slopes have radio luminosities consistent with wind-shock models.
Abstract
Red quasars exhibit a higher incidence of compact (galaxy-scale or smaller) radio emission than blue quasars, arising from systems near the radio-loud/radio-quiet threshold. In this paper we select quasars from SDSS (), and use archival radio data (FIRST, VLASS, LoTSS) to visually determine the radio morphologies of 573 red quasars compared to a control sample of 1278 typical blue quasars. We find an excess of steep-slope radio emission (, where ) from red quasars with compact () radio morphologies over 144 MHz, 1.4 GHz, and 3 GHz. This excess steep radio emission signature is not seen in normal blue quasars (radio compact or extended) or red quasars with extended low-frequency radio emission, which instead show a broad range of radio spectral slopes consistent with a range of different physical processes. We…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories
