Quasar radio-loudness and the elliptical core problem

Hamilton, Timothy S.

United States

Abstract

The dichotomy between radio-loud and radio-quiet quasi-stellar objects (QSOs) is not simply one of host morphology. While spiral galaxies almost exclusively host radio-quiet QSOs, ellipticals can host either radio-louds or radio-quiets. We find that a combination of accretion rate and host scale determines which type of QSO a given elliptical galaxy will host. QSOs with high X-ray luminosities (above 1044.5ergs-1 at 0.5keV) are mostly radio-loud. But those with low luminosities divide fairly neatly in size (measured by the half-light radius, re). Those larger than about 10kpc are radio-loud, while smaller ones are radio-quiet. It has recently been found that core and coreless ellipticals are also divided near this limit. This implies that for low-luminosity QSOs, radio-louds are found in core ellipticals, while radio-quiets are in coreless ellipticals and spirals. This segregation also shows up strongly for low-redshift objects and, in general, there is a loss over time of coreless, radio-loud QSOs. Since the presence or absence of a core may be tied to the galactic merger history, we have an evolutionary explanation for the differences between radio-loud and radio-quiet QSOs.

2010 Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
eHST 9