Abstract
Abstract
We explore the relationship between the ionized gas outflows and radio activity using a sample of ∼6000 active galactic nuclei (AGNs) at z < 0.4 with the kinematical measurement based on the
O
III
line profile and the radio detection in the VLA FIRST Survey. To quantify radio activity, we divide our sample into a series of binary subclasses based on the radio properties, i.e., radio luminous/radio weak, AGN-dominated/star-formation contaminated, compact/extended, and radio loud/radio quiet. None of the binary subclasses exhibits a significant difference in the normalized
O
III
velocity dispersion at a given
O
III
luminosity once we correct for the influence of the host galaxy’s gravitational potential. We only detect a significant difference in
O
III
kinematics between the high and low radio-Eddington ratio (L
1.4 GHz/L
Edd) AGNs. In contrast, we find a remarkable difference in ionized gas kinematics between high and low bolometric-Eddington ratio AGNs. These results suggest that accretion rate is the primary mechanism in driving ionized gas outflows, while radio activity may play a secondary role providing additional influence on gas kinematics.
Funder
National Research Foundation of Korea
Publisher
American Astronomical Society
Subject
Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics
Cited by
2 articles.
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