Abstract
Abstract Low-frequency radio selection finds radio-bright galaxies regardless of the amount of obscuration by gas and dust. We report Chandra observations of a complete 178 MHz–selected, and so orientation-unbiased, sample of 44 0.5 < z < 1 3CRR sources. The sample is comprised of quasars and narrow-line radio galaxies (NLRGs) with similar radio luminosities, and the radio structure serves as both an age and an orientation indicator. Consistent with unification, intrinsic obscuration (measured by N H, X-ray hardness ratio, and X-ray luminosity) generally increases with inclination. However, the sample includes a population not seen in high-z 3CRR sources: NLRGs viewed at intermediate inclination angles with N H < 1022 cm−2. Multiwavelength analysis suggests that these objects have lower L/L Edd than typical NLRGs at similar orientation. Thus, both orientation and L/L Edd are important, and a “radiation-regulated unification” provides a better explanation of the sample’s observed properties. In comparison with the 3CRR sample at 1 < z < 2, our lower-redshift sample shows a higher fraction of Compton-thin NLRGs (45% versus 29%) but a similar Compton-thick fraction (20%), implying a larger covering factor of Compton-thin material at intermediate viewing angles and thus a more “puffed-up” torus atmosphere. We posit that this is due to a range of L/L Edd extending to lower values in this sample. In contrast, at high redshifts, the narrower range and high L/L Edd values allowed orientation (and so simple unification) to dominate the sample’s observed properties.
Highlights
Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) are among the most luminous non-transient objects in the Universe and are responsible for the majority of accretion power output
In comparison with the 3CRR sample at 1 < z < 2, our lower-redshift sample shows a higher fraction of Compton-thin narrow-line radio galaxies (NLRGs) (45% vs. 29%) but similar Compton-thick fraction (20%), implying a larger covering factor of Compton-thin material at intermediate viewing angles and so a more “puffed-up” torus atmosphere
A complete, flux-limited (10 Jy), low-frequency (178 MHz) radio-selected, and so unbiased by the effects of orientation and obscuration sample of 0.5 < z < 1 3CRR sources has been observed with Chandra
Summary
Active Galactic Nuclei (AGN) are among the most luminous non-transient objects in the Universe and are responsible for the majority of accretion (as opposed to stellar) power output. Their activity is centered in a small nuclear region (the central engine), where the standard model invokes a supermassive black hole surrounded by accreting gas forming an accretion disk (emitting in the visible–UV–soft-X-rays) and a hot corona (emitting hard-X-rays). The narrow-line (“Type 2”) AGN (Seyfert 2s, narrow-line radio galaxies) are viewed edge-on to the torus, so the central engine and the BLR are blocked from view, and only the narrow emission
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