Jet-driven shocks and turbulence in radio-loud Active Galactic Nuclei observed with JWST MIRI/MRS
Rogemar A. Riffel, Gabriel L. Souza-Oliveira, Luis Colina, Almudena Alonso-Herrero, Marina Bianchin + 32 more
TLDR
JWST MIRI/MRS observations reveal radio jets drive widespread turbulence and shock excitation in multiphase gas of nearby radio-loud AGN.
Key contributions
- JWST MIRI/MRS observations of seven radio-loud AGN reveal jet-driven turbulence in multiphase gas.
- Radio jets enhance turbulence in both molecular and ionized gas, affecting regions beyond the collimated jet.
- Jet-driven shocks are the dominant mechanism for exciting H2 rotational lines in most observed sources.
- These interactions significantly shape the kinematics and excitation of the multiphase interstellar medium.
Why it matters
This paper highlights the crucial role of radio jets in shaping the interstellar medium of galaxies. It provides direct observational evidence using JWST, showing how jet-driven shocks and turbulence impact gas excitation and kinematics on nuclear scales, distinct from larger-scale feedback.
Original Abstract
Jet-cloud interactions are a key manifestation of Active Galactic Nucleus (AGN) feedback on nuclear scales, distinct from the large-scale radio-mode feedback that suppresses gas cooling in galaxy halos. On these smaller scales, radio jets can inject energy and momentum into the interstellar medium (ISM), shaping the physical and kinematic properties of the nuclear and circumnuclear regions of galaxies. Using JWST MIRI/MRS observations of seven nearby radio-loud AGN (3C293, 3C305, Centaurus A, Cygnus A, IC5063, NGC1052, and M87), we investigate jet-driven turbulence in both the warm molecular and ionized gas phases. By combining spatially resolved H$_2$/PAH flux ratios with diagnostic line ratios of the ionized gas, we constrain the dominant H$_2$ excitation processes and assess the impact of radio jet--ISM interactions on the multiphase gas. We find that radio jets drive enhanced turbulence in both molecular and ionized (traced by [FeII], [NeII] and [NeIII] lines) gas, not only along but also perpendicular to the jet axis, indicating that jet--ISM interactions extend beyond the collimated jet channel and affect the nuclear environment. Strong correlations between the H$_2$/PAH ratio, the H$_2$ excitation temperature, and shock-sensitive ionized-gas tracers indicate that jet-driven shocks dominate the excitation of the H$_2$ rotational lines in most sources. These results indicate that radio jets are a key driver of multiphase ISM kinematics and excitation in nearby radio-loud galaxies.
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