Radio jets from AGN in dwarf galaxies in the COSMOS survey: mechanical feedback out to redshift sim3.4
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 16:17 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Dwarf galaxies host radio AGN jets with powers of 10^42 to 10^44 erg s^{-1} out to z~3.4
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
We report the discovery of 35 dwarf galaxies hosting radio AGN out to redshift ∼3.4. The galaxies are drawn from the VLA-COSMOS 3 GHz Large Project and all are star-forming. After removing the contribution from star formation to the radio emission, we find a range of AGN radio luminosities of L^AGN_1.4 GHz ∼ 10^37-10^40 erg s^{-1}. The bolometric luminosities derived from the fit of their spectral energy distribution are ≳10^42 erg s^{-1}, in agreement with the presence of AGN in these dwarf galaxies. The 3 GHz radio emission of most of the sources is compact and the jet powers range from Q_jet ∼ 10^42 to 10^44 erg s^{-1}. These values, as well as the finding of jet efficiencies ≥10 % inmore
What carries the argument
Excess 1.4 GHz radio luminosity after star-formation subtraction, converted to jet mechanical power Q_jet via standard scaling relations
If this is right
- Jet mechanical feedback can strongly affect star formation in dwarf galaxies
- AGN feedback may trigger or hamper star formation and the gas supply for black-hole growth
- Low-mass AGN in dwarfs are not necessarily the untouched relics of early seed black holes
- Seed black-hole formation models must incorporate AGN mechanical effects at high redshift
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- Galaxy-formation simulations that omit AGN feedback in dwarfs may underpredict or overpredict star-formation histories at z greater than 2
- Targeted searches in other deep radio fields could test whether the 35 sources represent a common population or a rare subset
- The high jet efficiencies imply that a non-negligible fraction of the black-hole accretion energy is channeled into mechanical work rather than radiation in these systems
Load-bearing premise
The excess radio emission after subtracting the expected contribution from star formation is produced by AGN jets whose power can be reliably estimated from the 1.4 GHz luminosity using standard conversion formulas.
What would settle it
Deeper radio imaging or multi-frequency data that fully accounts for the observed 3 GHz flux by star-formation models alone, leaving no compact excess component attributable to jets.
Figures
read the original abstract
Dwarf galaxies are thought to host the remnants of the early Universe seed black holes (BHs) and to be dominated by supernova feedback. However, recent studies suggest that BH feedback could also strongly impact their growth. We report the discovery of 35 dwarf galaxies hosting radio AGN out to redshift $\sim$3.4, which constitutes the highest-redshift sample of AGN in dwarf galaxies. The galaxies are drawn from the VLA-COSMOS 3 GHz Large Project and all are star-forming. After removing the contribution from star formation to the radio emission, we find a range of AGN radio luminosities of $L^\mathrm{AGN}_\mathrm{1.4 GHz} \sim 10^{37}$-$10^{40}$ erg s$^{-1}$. The bolometric luminosities derived from the fit of their spectral energy distribution are $\gtrsim 10^{42}$ erg s$^{-1}$, in agreement with the presence of AGN in these dwarf galaxies. The 3 GHz radio emission of most of the sources is compact and the jet powers range from $Q_\mathrm{jet} \sim 10^{42}$ to 10$^{44}$ erg s$^{-1}$. These values, as well as the finding of jet efficiencies $\geq 10$ \% in more than 50\% of the sample, indicate that dwarf galaxies can host radio jets as powerful as those of massive radio galaxies whose jet mechanical feedback can strongly affect the formation of stars in the host galaxy. We conclude that AGN feedback can also have a very strong impact on dwarf galaxies, either triggering or hampering star formation and possibly the material available for BH growth. This implies that those low-mass AGN hosted in dwarf galaxies might not be the untouched relics of the early seed BHs, which has important implications for seed BH formation models.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The paper reports the discovery of 35 star-forming dwarf galaxies hosting radio AGN in the VLA-COSMOS 3 GHz survey, extending to z ≈ 3.4. After subtracting the star-formation contribution, the authors derive AGN radio luminosities L_1.4GHz^AGN ∼ 10^37–10^40 erg s^{-1}, bolometric luminosities ≳ 10^42 erg s^{-1}, compact 3 GHz emission, and jet powers Q_jet ∼ 10^42–10^44 erg s^{-1} using standard scalings, finding jet efficiencies ≥10% in >50% of the sample. They conclude that mechanical AGN feedback can strongly affect star formation and BH growth in dwarfs, implying these systems are not pristine seed BH relics.
Significance. If the jet-power estimates and efficiencies are robust, the result would be significant for galaxy evolution models: it extends evidence for powerful mechanical feedback to low-mass, gas-rich systems at high redshift and challenges the assumption that dwarf-galaxy BHs remain unaffected by AGN activity. The redshift reach and sample size would be notable strengths.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract: the AGN radio luminosities and subsequent Q_jet values rest on an unspecified subtraction of the star-formation radio contribution; no details are given on the adopted radio–SFR relation, how the subtraction is performed for each source, or error propagation. This step is load-bearing for all downstream claims about jet power and efficiency.
- [Abstract] Abstract (jet-power derivation): the reported Q_jet range and efficiencies ≥10% are obtained by applying standard L_radio–Q_jet scalings (e.g., Cavagnolo or Merloni–Heinz type) calibrated on FR I/II sources in massive ellipticals. The manuscript does not test or justify whether these relations remain valid at L_1.4GHz ∼ 10^37–10^40 erg s^{-1} in gas-rich, high-z dwarfs, where the relation could steepen, saturate, or be contaminated by unresolved winds or compact SF.
minor comments (1)
- [Abstract] The abstract states that all sources are star-forming but does not list the explicit selection criteria or redshift-dependent completeness limits used to define the dwarf-galaxy sample.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for their thorough review and constructive comments. We respond point-by-point to the major comments below, indicating planned revisions to improve clarity and robustness.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract: the AGN radio luminosities and subsequent Q_jet values rest on an unspecified subtraction of the star-formation radio contribution; no details are given on the adopted radio–SFR relation, how the subtraction is performed for each source, or error propagation. This step is load-bearing for all downstream claims about jet power and efficiency.
Authors: We agree the abstract provides insufficient detail on this critical step. The full manuscript (Section 3) specifies the adopted radio–SFR relation (Bell 2003), derives SFRs via multi-wavelength SED fitting, computes the expected SF radio luminosity at 3 GHz, and subtracts it from the total observed luminosity on a per-source basis to obtain L_1.4GHz^AGN; uncertainties incorporate both SFR errors and the intrinsic scatter of the relation. To address the concern directly, we will revise the abstract to briefly describe the procedure and direct readers to the methods for full details and error propagation. This change will be incorporated in the revised manuscript. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract (jet-power derivation): the reported Q_jet range and efficiencies ≥10% are obtained by applying standard L_radio–Q_jet scalings (e.g., Cavagnolo or Merloni–Heinz type) calibrated on FR I/II sources in massive ellipticals. The manuscript does not test or justify whether these relations remain valid at L_1.4GHz ∼ 10^37–10^40 erg s^{-1} in gas-rich, high-z dwarfs, where the relation could steepen, saturate, or be contaminated by unresolved winds or compact SF.
Authors: The Q_jet estimates rely on the standard Cavagnolo et al. (2010) and Merloni & Heinz (2007) relations, which are widely applied in the literature for radio AGN feedback studies across luminosity ranges. These scalings are grounded in jet physics and have been used for lower-luminosity systems; our sources show compact morphology consistent with AGN rather than extended SF. We did not perform an independent empirical test of the relations in this specific regime, as that lies beyond the scope of the current observational analysis. We will add a new discussion paragraph explicitly justifying the application, citing prior uses at comparable luminosities, and enumerating the relevant caveats (including possible wind or SF contamination). This will be a partial revision focused on transparency rather than new calibration. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No significant circularity; derivation relies on external standard relations and direct measurements
full rationale
The paper presents an observational sample of 35 dwarf galaxies with radio AGN, subtracts the star-formation contribution to radio emission using established methods, fits SEDs for bolometric luminosities, and converts 1.4 GHz luminosities to jet powers via standard external scaling relations (e.g., Cavagnolo/Merloni-Heinz type). No parameters are fitted to a subset of the data and then relabeled as predictions of closely related quantities; no self-definitional loops exist where X is defined in terms of Y; no load-bearing uniqueness theorems or ansatzes are imported via self-citation; and the central claims rest on measured luminosities plus externally calibrated conversions rather than reducing to quantities internal to the paper. The chain is therefore self-contained against external benchmarks.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
free parameters (1)
- star-formation radio contribution subtraction
axioms (1)
- domain assumption Standard radio luminosity to jet power conversion formulas apply to these dwarf galaxy sources
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
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The DSA-2000 -- A Radio Survey Camera
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