MIGHTEE: the nature of the radio-loud AGN population

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 516:1 (2022) 245-263

Authors:

Ih Whittam, Mj Jarvis, Cl Hale, M Prescott, Lk Morabito, I Heywood, Nj Adams, J Afonso, Fangxia An, Y Ao, Raa Bowler, Jd Collier, Rp Deane, J Delhaize, B Frank, M Glowacki, Pw Hatfield, N Maddox, L Marchetti, Am Matthews, I Prandoni, S Randriamampandry, Z Randriamanakoto, Djb Smith, Ar Taylor, Nl Thomas, M Vaccari

Abstract:

We study the nature of the faint radio source population detected in the MeerKAT International GHz Tiered Extragalactic Exploration (MIGHTEE) Early Science data in the COSMOS field, focusing on the properties of the radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGNs). Using the extensive multiwavelength data available in the field, we are able to classify 88 per cent of the 5223 radio sources in the field with host galaxy identifications as AGNs (35 per cent) or star-forming galaxies (54 per cent). We select a sample of radio-loud AGNs with redshifts out to z ∼ 6 and radio luminosities 1020 < L1.4 GHz/W Hz−1 < 1027 and classify them as high-excitation and low-excitation radio galaxies (HERGs and LERGs). The classification catalogue is released with this work. We find no significant difference in the host galaxy properties of the HERGs and LERGs in our sample. In contrast to previous work, we find that the HERGs and LERGs have very similar Eddington-scaled accretion rates; in particular we identify a population of very slowly accreting AGNs that are formally classified as HERGs at these low radio luminosities, where separating into HERGs and LERGs possibly becomes redundant. We investigate how black hole mass affects jet power, and find that a black hole mass ≳ 107.8 M is required to power a jet with mechanical power greater than the radiative luminosity of the AGN (Lmech/Lbol > 1). We discuss that both a high black hole mass and black hole spin may be necessary to launch and sustain a dominant radio jet.

The curious case of the "Heartworm" Nebula

Astrophysical Journal IOP Publishing 934:1 (2022) 78

Authors:

WD Cotton, F Camilo, W Becker, JJ Condon, J Forbrich, Ian Heywood, B Hugo, S Legodi, T Mauch, P Predehl, P Slane, MA Thompson

Abstract:

The curious Galactic features near G357.2−0.2 were observed with the MeerKAT radio interferometer array in the UHF and L bands (0.56–1.68 GHz). There are two possibly related features: a newly identified faint heart-shaped partial shell (the "heart"), and a series of previously known but now much better imaged narrow, curved features (the "worm") interior to the heart. Polarized emission suggests that much of the emission is nonthermal and is embedded in a dense plasma. The filaments of the worm appear to be magnetic structures powered by embedded knots that are sites of particle acceleration. The morphology of the worm broadly resembles some known pulsar wind nebulae (PWNe) but there is no known pulsar or PWN which could be powering this structure. We also present eROSITA observations of the field; no part of the nebula is detected in X-rays, but the current limits do not preclude the existence of a pulsar/PWN of intermediate spin-down luminosity.

MIGHTEE: the nature of the radio-loud AGN population

ArXiv 2207.12379 (2022)

Authors:

IH Whittam, MJ Jarvis, CL Hale, M Prescott, LK Morabito, I Heywood, NJ Adams, J Afonso, Fangxia An, Y Ao, RA Bowler, JD Collier, RP Deane, J Delhaize, B Frank, M Glowacki, PW Hatfield, N Maddox, L Marchetti, AM Matthews, I Prandoni, S Randriamampandry, Z Randriamanakoto, DJB Smith, AR Taylor, NL Thomas, M Vaccari

A Late-time Radio Flare Following a Possible Transition in Accretion State in the Tidal Disruption Event AT 2019azh

The Astrophysical Journal American Astronomical Society 933:2 (2022) 176

Authors:

Itai Sfaradi, Assaf Horesh, Rob Fender, David A Green, David RA Williams, Joe Bright, Steve Schulze

Radio Galaxy Zoo: using semi-supervised learning to leverage large unlabelled data sets for radio galaxy classification under data set shift

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press (OUP) 514:2 (2022) 2599-2613

Authors:

Inigo V Slijepcevic, Anna MM Scaife, Mike Walmsley, Micah Bowles, O Ivy Wong, Stanislav S Shabala, Hongming Tang