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LeMMINGs VII: 5 GHz, 50 mas e-MERLIN observations of a statistically complete sample of nearby AGN

Williams-Baldwin, D. R. A., Baldi, R. D., Beswick, R. J., McHardy, I. M., Carver, E., Clifford, J., Dullo, B. T., Kill, N., Krishnamoorthi, B. et al (2026) LeMMINGs VII: 5 GHz, 50 mas e-MERLIN observations of a statistically complete sample of nearby AGN. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (MNRAS) . ISSN 0035-8711

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/stag532

Abstract

We present 5 GHz e-MERLIN radio images at 50 mas resolution of the nuclear regions of the Legacy e-MERLIN Multi-band Imaging of Nearby Galaxies survey (LeMMINGs), the deepest statistically complete radio-band survey of the local Universe (<120 Mpc), consisting of 280 galaxies spanning all morphological and nuclear types. We detect nuclear radio emission above a median 5 sigma threshold of 0.33 mJy beam^-1 in 68 of 280 sources (24 percent), with core luminosities in the range 10^35 to 10^41.9 erg s^-1. The radio emission is attributed to active galactic nuclei, circumnuclear star formation, or, in the case of NGC 3690, a tidal disruption event. The brightest radio nuclei, with brightness temperatures >=10^6 K, reside in optically active galaxies such as LINERs and Seyferts. The detection rate for inactive systems (H II and absorption-line galaxies), which may host low-luminosity active galactic nuclei, is 8 percent. Most detections (78 percent) are compact (<10 pc), while the remaining 22 percent show extended jet-like features up to 380 pc. Compared to the 1.5 GHz LeMMINGs data, the 5 GHz observations provide superior resolution and spatial filtering, resolving out large-scale structures and isolating genuine nuclear emission. Our results suggest that low-luminosity active galactic nuclei are the primary manifestation of black hole activity in the local Universe in the form of compact jets and cores, with a preference for early-type hosts. The two LeMMINGs campaigns indicate that up to 30 percent of the local galaxy population hosts a radio-active nucleus, highlighting the necessity of high-resolution, high-sensitivity imaging for uncovering nuclear emission at the lowest luminosities.


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