Bibcode
DOI
Scarpa, Riccardo; Urry, C. Megan
Referencia bibliográfica
The Astrophysical Journal, Volume 556, Issue 2, pp. 749-755.
Fecha de publicación:
8
2001
Revista
Número de citas
18
Número de citas referidas
16
Descripción
We test the hypothesis that radio galaxies are a random subset of
otherwise normal elliptical galaxies. Starting with the observed optical
luminosity functions for elliptical galaxies, we show that the
probability of an elliptical forming a radio source is a continuous,
increasing function of optical luminosity, proportional to
L2+/-0.4. With this probability function and the luminosity
function of normal elliptical galaxies as input to Monte Carlo
simulations, we reproduce the observed distribution of radio galaxies in
the radio-optical luminosity plane. Our results show that radio galaxies
are a luminosity-biased but otherwise random sample of elliptical
galaxies. This unified view of radio-loud and radio-quiet ellipticals
also explains the well-known difference of ~0.5 mag in average optical
luminosity between FR I and FR II radio galaxies as a simple selection
effect. Specifically, FR II galaxies appear preferentially in smaller
galaxies because both radio and optical luminosity functions are steep,
so there is a negligible probability of observing a powerful radio
source associated with a bright galaxy; no intrinsic physical
differences between FR I and FR II host galaxies are required.