Extended Radio AGN at<i>z</i>∼ 1 in the ORELSE Survey: The Confining Effect of Dense Environments

Shen, Lu; Liu, Guilin; Zhang, Meng-Fei; Lemaux, Brian C.; Lubin, Lori M.; Pelliccia, Debora; Moravec, Emily; Golden-Marx, Emmet; Zhou, Hongyan; Fang, Wenjuan; Tomczak, Adam; McKean, John; Miller, Neal A.; Fassnacht, Christopher D.; Wu, Po-Feng; Kocevski, Dale; Gal, Roy; Hung, Denise; Squires, Gordon
2020
ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
DOI
10.3847/1538-4357/abb5a0
Recent hydrodynamic simulations and observations of radio jets have shown that the surrounding environment has a large effect on their resulting morphology. To investigate this, we use a sample of 50 Extended Radio Active Galactic Nuclei (ERAGN) detected in the Observations of Redshift Evolution in Large-Scale Environments survey. These sources are all successfully cross-identified to galaxies within a redshift range of 0.55 <= z <= 1.35, either through spectroscopic redshifts or accurate photometric redshifts. We find that ERAGN are more compact in high-density environments than those in low-density environments at a significance level of 4.5 sigma. Among a series of internal properties under our scrutiny, only the radio power demonstrates a positive correlation with their spatial extent. After removing the possible radio power effect, the difference of size in low- and high-density environments persists. In the global environment analyses, the majority (86%) of high-density ERAGN reside in the cluster/group environment. In addition, ERAGN in the cluster/group central regions are preferentially compact with a small scatter in size, compared to those in the cluster/group intermediate regions and fields. In conclusion, our data appear to support the interpretation that the dense intracluster gas in the central regions of galaxy clusters plays a major role in confining the spatial extent of radio jets.