Searching for signs of jet-driven negative feedback in the nearby radio galaxy UGC 05771
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Zovaro, Henry
Nesvadba, Nicole P. H.
Sharp, Rob
Bicknell, Geoffrey
Groves, Brent
Mukherjee, Dipanjan
Wagner, Alexander
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Oxford University Press
Abstract
Hydrodynamical simulations predict that the jets of young radio sources can inhibit star
formation in their host galaxies by injecting heat and turbulence into the interstellar medium
(ISM). To investigate jet–ISM interactions in a galaxy with a young radio source, we have
carried out a multiwavelength study of the z = 0.025 Compact Steep Spectrum radio source
hosted by the early-type galaxy UGC 05771. Using Keck/OSIRIS observations, we detected
H2 1–0 S(1) and [Fe II] emission at radii of 100s of parsecs, which traces shocked molecular
and ionized gas being accelerated outwards by the jets to low velocities, creating a ‘stalling
wind’. At kpc radii, we detected shocked ionized gas using observations from the CALIFA
survey, covering an area much larger than the pc-scale radio source. We found that existing
interferometric radio observations fail to recover a large fraction of the source’s total flux,
indicating the likely existence of jet plasma on kpc scales, which is consistent with the extent
of shocked gas in the host galaxy. To investigate the star formation efficiency in UGC 05771,
we obtained IRAM CO observations to analyse the molecular gas properties. We found that
UGC 05771 sits below the Kennicutt–Schmidt relation, although we were unable to definitively
conclude if direct interactions from the jets are inhibiting star formation. This result shows
that jets may be important in regulating star formation in the host galaxies of compact radio
sources.
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Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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