A CO-rich merger shaping a powerful and hyperluminous infrared radio galaxy at z = 2: The Dragonfly Galaxy

In the low-redshift Universe, the most powerful radio sources are often associated with gas-rich galaxy mergers or interactions. We here present evidence for an advanced, gas-rich (‘wet’) merger associated with a powerful radio galaxy at a redshift of z ~ 2. This radio galaxy, MRC 0152-209, is the m...

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Main Authors: Emonts, B., Mao, M., Stroe, A., Pentericci, L., Villar-Martín, M., Norris, R., Miley, G., De Breuck, C., Van Moorsel, G., Lehnert, M., Carilli, C., Röttgering, H., Seymour, Nick, Sadler, E., Ekers, R., Drouart, G., Feain, I., Colina, L., Stevens, J., Holt, J.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/18724
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author Emonts, B.
Mao, M.
Stroe, A.
Pentericci, L.
Villar-Martín, M.
Norris, R.
Miley, G.
De Breuck, C.
Van Moorsel, G.
Lehnert, M.
Carilli, C.
Röttgering, H.
Seymour, Nick
Sadler, E.
Ekers, R.
Drouart, G.
Feain, I.
Colina, L.
Stevens, J.
Holt, J.
author_facet Emonts, B.
Mao, M.
Stroe, A.
Pentericci, L.
Villar-Martín, M.
Norris, R.
Miley, G.
De Breuck, C.
Van Moorsel, G.
Lehnert, M.
Carilli, C.
Röttgering, H.
Seymour, Nick
Sadler, E.
Ekers, R.
Drouart, G.
Feain, I.
Colina, L.
Stevens, J.
Holt, J.
author_sort Emonts, B.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description In the low-redshift Universe, the most powerful radio sources are often associated with gas-rich galaxy mergers or interactions. We here present evidence for an advanced, gas-rich (‘wet’) merger associated with a powerful radio galaxy at a redshift of z ~ 2. This radio galaxy, MRC 0152-209, is the most infrared-luminous high-redshift radio galaxy known in the Southern hemisphere. Using the Australia Telescope Compact Array, we obtained high-resolution CO(1–0) data of cold molecular gas, which we complement with Hubble Space Telescope (HST)/Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) imaging and William Herschel Telescope long-slit spectroscopy. We find that, while roughly MH2 ~ 2 × 1010 M☉ of molecular gas coincides with the central host galaxy, another MH2 ~ 3 × 1010 M☉ is spread across a total extent of ~60 kpc. Most of this widespread CO(1–0) appears to follow prominent tidal features visible in the rest-frame near-UV HST/WFPC2 imaging. Lyα emission shows an excess over He II, but a deficiency over LIR, which is likely the result of photoionization by enhanced but very obscured star formation that was triggered by the merger.In terms of feedback, the radio source is aligned with widespread CO(1–0) emission, which suggests that there is a physical link between the propagating radio jets and the presence of cold molecular gas on scales of the galaxy's halo. Its optical appearance, combined with the transformational stage at which we witness the evolution of MRC 0152-209, leads us to adopt the name ‘Dragonfly Galaxy’. A young population alone is insufficient because an evolved giant star population produces a 1-μm rest-frame peak that is observed in the IRAC photometry. This discovery confirms that many of the stellar populations in high-redshift radio galaxies were formed by massive starbursts in the early Universe. Gas-rich mergers and/or jet–cloud interactions are favoured for triggering the intense star formation necessary to explain the properties of the spectral energy distributions. The discovery of similar characteristics in two distant radio galaxies suggests that multiple stellar populations, one old and one young, may be a generic feature of the luminous infrared radio galaxy population.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T07:27:07Z
publishDate 2015
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-187242017-09-13T13:43:07Z A CO-rich merger shaping a powerful and hyperluminous infrared radio galaxy at z = 2: The Dragonfly Galaxy Emonts, B. Mao, M. Stroe, A. Pentericci, L. Villar-Martín, M. Norris, R. Miley, G. De Breuck, C. Van Moorsel, G. Lehnert, M. Carilli, C. Röttgering, H. Seymour, Nick Sadler, E. Ekers, R. Drouart, G. Feain, I. Colina, L. Stevens, J. Holt, J. In the low-redshift Universe, the most powerful radio sources are often associated with gas-rich galaxy mergers or interactions. We here present evidence for an advanced, gas-rich (‘wet’) merger associated with a powerful radio galaxy at a redshift of z ~ 2. This radio galaxy, MRC 0152-209, is the most infrared-luminous high-redshift radio galaxy known in the Southern hemisphere. Using the Australia Telescope Compact Array, we obtained high-resolution CO(1–0) data of cold molecular gas, which we complement with Hubble Space Telescope (HST)/Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2) imaging and William Herschel Telescope long-slit spectroscopy. We find that, while roughly MH2 ~ 2 × 1010 M☉ of molecular gas coincides with the central host galaxy, another MH2 ~ 3 × 1010 M☉ is spread across a total extent of ~60 kpc. Most of this widespread CO(1–0) appears to follow prominent tidal features visible in the rest-frame near-UV HST/WFPC2 imaging. Lyα emission shows an excess over He II, but a deficiency over LIR, which is likely the result of photoionization by enhanced but very obscured star formation that was triggered by the merger.In terms of feedback, the radio source is aligned with widespread CO(1–0) emission, which suggests that there is a physical link between the propagating radio jets and the presence of cold molecular gas on scales of the galaxy's halo. Its optical appearance, combined with the transformational stage at which we witness the evolution of MRC 0152-209, leads us to adopt the name ‘Dragonfly Galaxy’. A young population alone is insufficient because an evolved giant star population produces a 1-μm rest-frame peak that is observed in the IRAC photometry. This discovery confirms that many of the stellar populations in high-redshift radio galaxies were formed by massive starbursts in the early Universe. Gas-rich mergers and/or jet–cloud interactions are favoured for triggering the intense star formation necessary to explain the properties of the spectral energy distributions. The discovery of similar characteristics in two distant radio galaxies suggests that multiple stellar populations, one old and one young, may be a generic feature of the luminous infrared radio galaxy population. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/18724 10.1093/mnras/stv930 fulltext
spellingShingle Emonts, B.
Mao, M.
Stroe, A.
Pentericci, L.
Villar-Martín, M.
Norris, R.
Miley, G.
De Breuck, C.
Van Moorsel, G.
Lehnert, M.
Carilli, C.
Röttgering, H.
Seymour, Nick
Sadler, E.
Ekers, R.
Drouart, G.
Feain, I.
Colina, L.
Stevens, J.
Holt, J.
A CO-rich merger shaping a powerful and hyperluminous infrared radio galaxy at z = 2: The Dragonfly Galaxy
title A CO-rich merger shaping a powerful and hyperluminous infrared radio galaxy at z = 2: The Dragonfly Galaxy
title_full A CO-rich merger shaping a powerful and hyperluminous infrared radio galaxy at z = 2: The Dragonfly Galaxy
title_fullStr A CO-rich merger shaping a powerful and hyperluminous infrared radio galaxy at z = 2: The Dragonfly Galaxy
title_full_unstemmed A CO-rich merger shaping a powerful and hyperluminous infrared radio galaxy at z = 2: The Dragonfly Galaxy
title_short A CO-rich merger shaping a powerful and hyperluminous infrared radio galaxy at z = 2: The Dragonfly Galaxy
title_sort co-rich merger shaping a powerful and hyperluminous infrared radio galaxy at z = 2: the dragonfly galaxy
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/18724