Spectral Energy Distributions of low-luminosity radio galaxies at z~1-3: a high-z view of the host/AGN connection

Abstract

We study the Spectral Energy Distributions, SEDs, (from FUV to MIR bands) of the first sizeable sample of 34 low-luminosity radio galaxies at high redshifts, selected in the COSMOS field. To model the SEDs we use two different template-fitting techniques: i) the Hyperz code that only considers single stellar templates and ii) our own developed technique 2SPD that also includes the contribution from a young stellar population and dust emission. The resulting photometric redshifts range from z ~0.7 to 3 and are in substantial agreement with measurements from earlier work, but significantly more accurate. The SED of most objects is consistent with a dominant contribution from an old stellar population with an age ~1 - 3 109 years. The inferred total stellar mass range is ~1010 - 1012 M(sun). Dust emission is needed to account for the 24micron emission in 15 objects. Estimates of the dust luminosity yield values in the range Ldust ~1043.5 -1045.5 erg s-1. The global dust temperature, crudely estimated for the sources with a MIR excess, is ~ 300-850 K. A UV excess is often observed with a luminosity in the range ~ 1042-1044 erg s-1 at 2000 A rest frame. Our results show that the hosts of these high-z low-luminosity radio sources are old massive galaxies, similarly to the local FRIs. However, the UV and MIR excesses indicate the possible significant contribution from star formation and/or nuclear activity in such bands, not seen in low-z FRIs. Our sources display a wide variety of properties: from possible quasars at the highest luminosities, to low-luminosity old galaxies.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…