The Astrophysical Journal (Jan 2023)

Radio Emission of Nearby Early-type Galaxies in the Low and Very Low Radio Luminosity Range

  • Anna Wójtowicz,
  • Łukasz Stawarz,
  • C. C. Cheung,
  • Norbert Werner,
  • Dominik Rudka

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/acb498
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 944, no. 2
p. 195

Abstract

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We analyze radio continuum emission of early-type galaxies with dynamical measurements of central supermassive black hole (SMBH) masses and well-characterized large-scale environments, but regardless of the exact level of the nuclear activity. The 1.4 GHz radio fluxes collected with ∼arcmin resolution for 62 nearby targets (distances ≲153 Mpc) correspond to low and very low monochromatic luminosities of L _r ∼ 10 ^35 –10 ^41 erg s ^−1 . We quantify possible correlations between the radio properties with the main parameters of SMBHs, host galaxies, and hot gaseous halos, finding a general bimodality in the radio luminosity distribution, with the borderline between radio-bright and radio-dim populations at $\mathrm{log}{L}_{{\rm{r}}}/{L}_{\mathrm{Edd}}\simeq -8.5$ . We analyze the far-infrared data for the targets, finding that all radio-bright and over a half of the radio-dim sources are overluminous in radio wavelengths with respect to the far-infrared–radio correlation. High-resolution radio maps reveal that the overwhelming majority of radio-dim sources is unresolved on the arcsecond scale, while the bulk of radio-bright sources display extended jets and lobes of low- and intermediate-power radio galaxies; these jets dominate the radio emission of radio-bright objects. Regarding the origin of the radio emission of radio-dim sources, we discuss two main possibilities. One possibility is the advection-dominated accretion flow model, in which the radio and nuclear X-ray radiative outputs at very low accretion rates are both dominated by unresolved jets. The other possibility is that the radio-dim sources, unlike the radio-bright ones, are characterized by low values of SMBH spins, so that their radio emission is not related to the jets, but instead is due to a combination of star-forming processes and previous nuclear outbursts.

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