BEACON: JWST NIRCam Pure-parallel Imaging Survey. III. Constraints on the UV LF and the Clustering of z~7-14 Galaxies
(2026)
Introducing Δ V ⋆ − g: a new universal kinematic disturbance parameter
Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society Oxford University Press 548:3 (2026) stag747
Abstract:
We introduce a new kinematic disturbance parameter, (pronounced ‘DVSG’), which takes advantage of integral field spectroscopy (IFS) to quantify differences between a galaxy’s stellar and gas velocity maps. The motivation behind is to capture disturbances in the kinematics of a galaxy that might be missed by alternative methods, while also attempting to minimize bias towards galaxy properties or features of the IFS data. We first detail the reasons for introducing this parameter and explain how the value of a galaxy can be calculated. We then present initial results using to quantify the kinematic disturbance of obscured active galactic nuclei (AGNs) found in the MaNGA (Mapping Nearby Galaxies at Apache Point Observatory) survey. We find that there is no statistically significant difference between the distributions of AGN and a control sample (matched in mass and redshift) of inactive galaxies. This suggests that AGN triggering may not be preferentially caused by any distinct kinematic disturbance process, or combination of processes, beyond those observed in inactive galaxies.TDCOSMO XXV: A "soup-to-nuts" 6.5% $H_0$ measurement $-$ strong lensing and dynamics with a maximally flexible mass sheet
(2026)
Here Be SDRAGNs—Spiral Galaxies Hosting Large Double Radio Sources
The Astronomical Journal IOP Publishing 171:5 (2026) 289
Abstract:
We present a sample of large double radio sources hosted by spiral galaxies (spiral double radio active galactic nuclei, SDRAGNs). Candidates were initially selected through the Radio Galaxy Zoo project and subsequently refined using Sloan Digital Sky Survey images. The most promising were targeted in the Zoo Gems Hubble Space Telescope (HST) program, yielding images for 36 candidates. We assess the likelihood that each spiral galaxy is the genuine host of the radio emission, finding 15 new high-probability SDRAGNs. The hosts are seen preferentially close to edge-on. SDRAGNs predominantly show type II Fanaroff–Riley (FR II) radio structures and optical pseudobulges. After accounting for sample selection effects, the radio-jet axes lie preferentially near the poles of the galactic disks; we find a constant probability distribution for intrinsic pole–jet angles ϕ < 30°, declining to zero at ϕ = 60°. We have obtained optical spectra for all these newly identified SDRAGNs. Among both previously known and new SDRAGN samples, 8/25 show Seyfert 2 signatures, 6/25 show central star formation, and 5/25 show low-ionization nuclear emission-line region emission strong enough to indicate active galactic nuclei (AGN) activity or shock ionization, broadly similar to radio galaxies in elliptical hosts but with the addition of star formation (diluting or masking weak AGN signatures). SDRAGNs include FR II sources seen at unusually low radio powers, and preferentially occur in significant galaxy overdensities on 1 Mpc scales. Our “false alarms”—systems where HST data show the spiral is not the actual host galaxy—include radio sources seen through large portions of foreground spiral disks, potentially providing useful probes for Faraday rotation studies of disk magnetic fields.Spatially Resolved Kinematics of SLACS Lens Galaxies. II: Breaking Degeneracies with Lensing and Dynamical Models
(2026)