The Optical-Radio Mapping: the kinetic efficiency of Radio-Loud AGNs
Abstract
We constrain the mean kinetic efficiency of radio-loud active galactic nuclei by using an optically selected sample for which both the optical and the radio luminosity functions (LFs) have been determined; the former traces the bolometric luminosity L, while the latter traces the kinetic power Lk, empirically correlated to the radio emission. Thus in terms of the ratio gk=Lk/L, we can convert the optical LF of the sample into a radio one. This computed LF is shown to match the directly observed LF for the same sample if gk=0.10+0.05-0.01 holds, with a scatter σ=0.38+0.04-0.09 dex; with these values we also match a number of independent correlations between Lk, L and radio emission, that we derive through Monte Carlo simulations. We proceed to translate the value of gk into a constraint on the kinetic efficiency for the production of radio jets or winds, namely, εk=Lk/(Mdot*c2)~0.01 in terms of the rate Mdot of mass accretion onto the central black hole. Then, on assuming that on average the radio sources share the same kinetic efficiency, we compute a solid lower limit of about 25% on the contribution of radio sources to the local black hole mass density.
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