Unveiling the physics of radio AGN feedback with LOFAR
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Hertfordshire
Department Name: School of Physics, Eng & Computer Scienc
Abstract
One of the key ingredients of our models of how galaxies grow to the sizes they do is a 'feedback' process that stops the most massive galaxies from getting even bigger. In these galaxies, some of the matter that accretes onto the central supermassive black hole drives powerful jets of material that plough at high speed into the galaxy, heating the gas around them and stopping it from cooling and turning into stars. The jets are thought to act like a thermostat, switching on when the gas in the galaxy starts to cool and fall on to the black hole and heating it up again until it stops. We have observed these jets for many years in the form of 'radio galaxies' , characteristic double structures seen with radio telescopes around many massive galaxies.
We are conducting a survey of the northern sky with the LOFAR radio telescope which is by far the largest and most sensitive survey yet, and have identified hundreds of thousands of these radio galaxies and matched them up with the optical galaxy that generates the jet. What we want to do now is to understand whether this 'feedback' picture works in detail -- overall, is the thermostat working to maintain the temperature of the hot gas just right, or are there types of environment where it is more or less effective? And how does this change over the history of the universe? The data provided by the LOFAR survey can answer these questions, and our objective is to measure the properties of the radio galaxies we have found in great detail so as to get an understanding of how much energy each one is putting into its environment -- and what that environment is. Overall we will build up a picture of the way 'feedback' works, if it does, that will allow us to test our best computer models of the evolution of the universe.
We are conducting a survey of the northern sky with the LOFAR radio telescope which is by far the largest and most sensitive survey yet, and have identified hundreds of thousands of these radio galaxies and matched them up with the optical galaxy that generates the jet. What we want to do now is to understand whether this 'feedback' picture works in detail -- overall, is the thermostat working to maintain the temperature of the hot gas just right, or are there types of environment where it is more or less effective? And how does this change over the history of the universe? The data provided by the LOFAR survey can answer these questions, and our objective is to measure the properties of the radio galaxies we have found in great detail so as to get an understanding of how much energy each one is putting into its environment -- and what that environment is. Overall we will build up a picture of the way 'feedback' works, if it does, that will allow us to test our best computer models of the evolution of the universe.
Organisations
Publications
Arnaudova M
(2024)
Exploring the radio-loudness of SDSS quasars with spectral stacking
Charlton K
(2025)
A spatially resolved spectral analysis of giant radio galaxies with MeerKAT
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Oei M
(2024)
Black hole jets on the scale of the Cosmic Web
Pinjarkar S
(2025)
MIGHTEE: exploring the relationship between spectral index, redshift, and radio luminosity
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Shimwell T
(2025)
The LOFAR Two-metre Sky Survey: Deep Fields Data Release 2 I. The ELAIS-N1 field
in Astronomy & Astrophysics
Tsalapatas K
(2024)
New supernova remnant candidates in the LOFAR Two Metre Sky Survey
in Astronomy & Astrophysics
Wong O
(2025)
Radio Galaxy Zoo data release 1: 100185 radio source classifications from the FIRST and ATLAS surveys
in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
Zhai S
(2025)
The evolution of extragalactic peaked-spectrum sources down to 54 megahertz
in Astronomy & Astrophysics
