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arxiv: 2606.28257 · v1 · pith:P72QZ3NTnew · submitted 2026-06-26 · 🌌 astro-ph.GA

When Jets Don't Quench: Near-Infrared H₂ in Star Forming Low-Excitation Radio Galaxies

Pith reviewed 2026-06-29 03:02 UTC · model grok-4.3

classification 🌌 astro-ph.GA
keywords BLERGsH2 emissionmergersradio galaxiesmolecular gasAGNstar formationnear-infrared
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The pith

Merger processes primarily excite warm H2 in star-forming low-excitation radio galaxies.

A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.

The paper presents near-infrared observations of eight low-redshift blue low-excitation radio galaxies. These rare objects show radio activity alongside star formation and exhibit warm molecular hydrogen emission. The emission does not increase with radio power but is strongest in systems with merger signatures. This points to tidal shocks and gas inflows from mergers as the main excitation mechanism rather than the jets themselves. The results suggest these galaxies are in a transitional phase before feedback dominates.

Core claim

In BLERGs the strongest warm H2 emission occurs in morphologically disturbed and advanced-merger systems with no clear positive dependence on radio power. Merger-driven processes including tidal shocks, gas inflows, and disturbed interstellar medium conditions are therefore the dominant drivers of the excitation, although localized jet-driven heating may contribute in individual systems. The compact radio morphologies and gas-rich hosts are consistent with a short-lived evolutionary phase in which radio AGN activity coexists with an interaction-driven molecular-rich interstellar medium.

What carries the argument

Comparison of mass-normalized warm H2 luminosities from ro-vibrational transitions against radio power and morphological disturbance in a sample of BLERGs.

If this is right

  • The properties of BLERGs fit a short-lived phase before the onset of large-scale maintenance-mode feedback.
  • Compact radio sources may host localized jet-ISM interactions.
  • Spatially resolved spectroscopy and higher-resolution radio imaging are required to disentangle merger and jet roles.

Where Pith is reading between the lines

These are editorial extensions of the paper, not claims the author makes directly.

  • Similar excitation mechanisms could operate in merging galaxies without radio AGN.
  • Feedback models may need to incorporate temporary coexistence of jets and star formation during mergers.
  • Selection effects in identifying BLERGs could be tested with larger samples.

Load-bearing premise

Morphological disturbances and merger signatures drive the observed H2 excitation levels rather than selection effects or undetected jet-ISM interactions.

What would settle it

Detection of strong H2 emission uncorrelated with morphology or a clear scaling with radio power in additional BLERGs would falsify the merger dominance claim.

Figures

Figures reproduced from arXiv: 2606.28257 by Andreea O. Petric, Annie Giman, Brian C. Lemaux, Debora Pelliccia, Justin A. Otter, Kate Rowlands, Katherine Alatalo, Mark Lacy, Maya Skarbinski, Nicole P. H. Nesvadba, Pallavi Patil, Reiner M. J. Janssen, Swetha Sankar, Timothy M. Heckman.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Figure 1: Continuum-subtracted observed K-band GNIRS spectra and emission line fits for the five targets in our sample with detected emission features. In each panel, the grey curve shows the continuum-subtracted data with error bars, and the red curve shows the total fitted emission line model. Vertical dotted lines mark the expected positions of detected transitions at the systemic redshift of each target. J1056+1… view at source ↗
Figure 2
Figure 2. Figure 2: H2 excitation diagrams for J1056+1419 (top) and J1040+2957 (bottom). Blue diamonds are detections of v = 1 rotational–vibrational lines, plotted as log(Nv,j/gv,j ) in cm−2 (not normalized) against upper-level energy Ev,j/k in units of 103 K. The red circle in the top panel is a v = 2 detection; the salmon downward triangle shows v = 2 upper limits. Red vertical bars indicate uncertainties. The grey dashed … view at source ↗
Figure 3
Figure 3. Figure 3: Top panels: Continuum-subtracted GNIRS spectra around the [Fe II] 1.644 µm line for J1056+1419 (left) and J1040+2957 (right), with best-fit emission models overplotted in red. J1056+1419 shows a clear detection, while J1040+2957 is dominated by noise with no significant line detection. Residuals are shown beneath each spectrum. Bottom panel: Diagnostic diagram of log([Fe II] 1.644 µm/Brδ) versus log([Si VI… view at source ↗
Figure 4
Figure 4. Figure 4: Fraction of galaxies as a function of merger stage for the parent blue LERG sample (blue), parent red LERG sample (red), and the BLERG subsample presented in this paper (orange). Stages are defined as: 0—undisturbed, 1—early interaction, 2—tidal features, 3—disrupted disks with two nuclei, 4—single coalesced nucleus. Error bars are 1σ binomial. Only the blue LERG samples are represented at the most advance… view at source ↗
Figure 5
Figure 5. Figure 5: PanSTARRS gri color composite images of the BLERG subsample discussed in this paper. Each panel shows one galaxy, with groups outlined according to their molecular hydrogen emission properties: strong warm H2 (blue box), marginal H2 detection (green box), and featureless (orange box). Each image is 1′′ × 1 ′′ with a scale bar of 5 kpc, and labeled with the SDSS designation. These images highlight the diver… view at source ↗
Figure 6
Figure 6. Figure 6: Distribution of projected radio-source physical sizes measured from the VLASS 2–4,GHz (Lacy et al. 2020) component catalog (top) and from FIRST 1.4,GHz (Becker et al. 1995) (bottom). Red lines show the red LERG pop￾ulation, blue lines the blue LERG parent sample excluding our spectroscopic subsample, and the orange dashed line the BLERG subsample (N = 8). Sizes are computed from the catalogs’ deconvolved a… view at source ↗
Figure 7
Figure 7. Figure 7: VLASS 2-4 GHz continuum cutouts for the eight BLERG sources discussed in this paper, showing either median￾stacked quicklook (QL) or single-epoch (SE) images. For point sources —J0754+3910, J0028+0055, J1040+2957, J1056+1419, J0758+2705— SE maps are used where available, capturing their small-scale, centrally peaked radio morphologies; J0754+3910 is shown in a QL coadd due to lack of SE imaging. For extend… view at source ↗
Figure 8
Figure 8. Figure 8: (left) Mass-normalized and (right) non-mass-normalized H2 1–0 S(1) luminosity versus 1.4 GHz radio continuum luminosity for our BLERG subsample and comparison samples. All H2 measurements trace the ro-vibrational 1–0 S(1) transition at 2.122 µm, probing warm (T ∼ 2000 K) molecular gas. BLERGs (this work) are shown by merger stage: Stage 1 (blue squares), Stage 4 (red triangles), and Stage 0 (orange diamond… view at source ↗
read the original abstract

We present new Gemini/GNIRS near-infrared spectroscopic observations of eight low-redshift ($z < 0.1$) blue low-excitation radio galaxies (BLERGs), a rare subset ($\sim 2.5\%$ of low-excitation radio galaxies; LERGs) that complicate the classical jet-mode AGN picture by combining radio activity with star-forming, gas-rich hosts. These star-forming BLERGs exhibit significant warm H$_2$ emission traced via ro-vibrational transitions at $T \sim 2000$--$4000$ K. We find that BLERGs span a broad range of mass-normalized warm H$_2$ luminosities ($L_{\rm H_2}/M_\star$), comparable to radio-emitting early-type galaxies, yet without a clear positive dependence on radio power. Instead, the strongest H$_2$ emission preferentially occurs in morphologically disturbed and advanced-merger systems, while compact radio sources ($\lesssim 20$ kpc) remain plausible sites of localized jet-ISM interaction. Together, these results suggest that merger-driven processes, including tidal shocks, gas inflows, and disturbed interstellar medium conditions, are the dominant drivers of warm molecular gas excitation in BLERGs, although localized jet-driven heating may contribute in individual systems. The compact radio morphologies, gas-rich hosts, and rarity of BLERGs are consistent with a short-lived evolutionary phase in which radio AGN activity coexists with an interaction-driven, molecular-rich interstellar medium prior to the onset of large-scale maintenance-mode feedback. Spatially resolved spectroscopy and higher-resolution radio imaging will be essential to disentangle the relative roles of mergers and jets in regulating the molecular gas of jet-mode AGN.

Editorial analysis

A structured set of objections, weighed in public.

Desk editor's note, referee report, simulated authors' rebuttal, and a circularity audit. Tearing a paper down is the easy half of reading it; the pith above is the substance, this is the friction.

Referee Report

2 major / 2 minor

Summary. The paper presents new Gemini/GNIRS near-infrared spectroscopic observations of eight low-redshift (z < 0.1) blue low-excitation radio galaxies (BLERGs). These objects show significant warm H2 emission (T ~ 2000-4000 K) traced by ro-vibrational lines. The mass-normalized H2 luminosities span a range comparable to other radio-emitting early-type galaxies but exhibit no clear positive correlation with radio power. Instead, the strongest emission occurs preferentially in morphologically disturbed and advanced-merger systems. The authors conclude that merger-driven processes (tidal shocks, gas inflows, disturbed ISM) dominate the excitation, while allowing that localized jet-ISM interactions may contribute in individual cases. They interpret the compact radio morphologies and gas-rich hosts as evidence for a short-lived evolutionary phase prior to large-scale maintenance-mode feedback.

Significance. If the reported trends are robust, the work provides direct observational evidence that radio AGN activity can coexist with star formation and merger-driven molecular gas excitation in a rare (~2.5%) subset of LERGs, complicating the classical jet-mode feedback picture. The NIR spectroscopy of warm H2 offers a useful probe of the ISM conditions in these systems. The manuscript correctly notes the need for resolved spectroscopy and higher-resolution radio imaging to separate contributions. Credit is due for targeting this underrepresented population and for the qualitative morphological correlation analysis.

major comments (2)
  1. [§3] §3 (Results on H2 luminosities and radio power): the claim of 'no clear positive dependence on radio power' and preference for disturbed morphologies rests on visual inspection of eight objects without reported quantitative tests (e.g., rank correlation coefficients, p-values, or bootstrap uncertainties on the trends). This is load-bearing for the central assertion that mergers dominate over jets.
  2. [§2] §2 (Sample definition): the manuscript provides no explicit criteria, parent sample size, or completeness assessment for selecting these eight BLERGs from the broader LERG population. Without this, it is impossible to evaluate whether the observed H2-morphology correlation could arise from selection biases rather than physical drivers.
minor comments (2)
  1. [Figure 1] Figure 1 and associated text: the radio size cutoff of ≲20 kpc used to flag potential jet-ISM sites should be justified with a reference to the beam or resolution limits of the radio data.
  2. [Methods] Notation: L_H2/M_star is used without an explicit definition of the stellar mass estimation method or IMF assumption in the methods section.

Simulated Author's Rebuttal

2 responses · 0 unresolved

We thank the referee for their constructive and detailed report. We address each major comment below and agree that revisions are needed to strengthen the statistical presentation and clarify sample selection.

read point-by-point responses
  1. Referee: [§3] §3 (Results on H2 luminosities and radio power): the claim of 'no clear positive dependence on radio power' and preference for disturbed morphologies rests on visual inspection of eight objects without reported quantitative tests (e.g., rank correlation coefficients, p-values, or bootstrap uncertainties on the trends). This is load-bearing for the central assertion that mergers dominate over jets.

    Authors: We agree that quantitative tests are warranted to support the trends. In the revised manuscript we will add a Spearman rank correlation analysis between mass-normalized H2 luminosity and radio power, reporting the coefficient and p-value with the explicit caveat of small sample size (N=8). We will also apply bootstrap resampling to estimate uncertainties on the reported trends and will note that the morphological preference remains qualitative but is consistent with the quantitative luminosity ranking. These additions will be placed in §3 without changing the overall interpretation. revision: yes

  2. Referee: [§2] §2 (Sample definition): the manuscript provides no explicit criteria, parent sample size, or completeness assessment for selecting these eight BLERGs from the broader LERG population. Without this, it is impossible to evaluate whether the observed H2-morphology correlation could arise from selection biases rather than physical drivers.

    Authors: We accept this criticism and will expand §2 with the missing details. The revised text will state the parent LERG catalog (including its total size at z<0.1), the precise optical and radio selection cuts used to identify the blue star-forming subset, and the resulting ~2.5% fraction. We will also discuss survey completeness limits and argue that the uniform selection across the parent sample makes a strong morphology-driven selection bias unlikely, while acknowledging that a larger statistical sample would be ideal. revision: yes

Circularity Check

0 steps flagged

No significant circularity

full rationale

This is a purely observational paper reporting Gemini/GNIRS near-IR spectra of eight BLERGs, measured H2 luminosities normalized by stellar mass, morphological classifications from imaging, and qualitative trends (strongest H2 in disturbed/merger systems, no clear radio-power correlation). No equations, derivations, fitted parameters, model predictions, or ansatzes appear anywhere in the text. The central suggestion is presented as an interpretation of the observed trends rather than a result derived from any internal chain. No self-citations are load-bearing for any claim, and the argument does not reduce to renaming or self-definition. The paper is self-contained as an empirical report.

Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger

0 free parameters · 0 axioms · 0 invented entities

No free parameters, mathematical axioms, or invented entities; the work is observational and relies on standard assumptions of spectroscopic line identification and morphological classification.

pith-pipeline@v0.9.1-grok · 5920 in / 1060 out tokens · 40116 ms · 2026-06-29T03:02:00.821812+00:00 · methodology

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