Published February 27, 2026
| Version v1
Poster
Open
Radio jets moving and shaking the ISM
Description
The interplay between the nuclear activity and the interstellar medium (ISM) of galaxies plays
an important role in their evolution: the gas accreting onto the dormant supermassive black hole
turns it into an active galactic nucleus (AGN) and the ensuing activity is believed to starve the
host galaxy of the fuel needed to form stars. The contribution of radio-loud AGN to this feedback
effect is yet to be well understood. In order to understand the impact of radio AGN, we need
to study the jet-ISM interaction in detail in sources covering a wide range of parameters such as
age/morphology, radio power. In this context, I will present a detailed study of a very young (5000
years old) radio source, 4C31.04. Our pc-scale atomic gas observations and kpc-scale molecular
gas observations combined show the presence of a strong coupling between the radio jets and the
cold gas resulting in significantly disturbed gas in the nuclear region, in agreement with various
assumptions of numerical simulations while also posing challenges to the models trying to explain
the incidence of cold gas in such extreme environments.
Files
AGN_SMurthy.pdf
Files
(2.1 MB)
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