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Testing for Shock-Heated X-ray Gas Around Compact Steep Spectrum Radio Galaxies

Authors :
Kevin Christiansen
C. A. Mullarkey
Grant R. Tremblay
Jacob Noel-Storr
Tracy E. Clarke
Stefi A. Baum
Diana M Worrall
Rupal Mittal
Barry Rothberg
Christopher P. O'Dea
Source :
O'Dea, C P, Worrall, D M, Tremblay, G R, Clarke, T E, Rothberg, B, Baum, S A, Christiansen, K P, Mullarkey, C A, Noel-Storr, J & Mittal, R 2017, ' Testing for shock-heated x-ray gas around compact steep spectrum radio galaxies ', Astrophysical Journal, vol. 851, no. 2, 87 . https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa9923, NASA Astrophysics Data System
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

We present Chandra and XMM-Newton X-ray, VLA radio, and optical observations of three candidate Compact Steep Spectrum (CSS) radio galaxies. CSS sources are galactic scale and are presumably driving a shock through the ISM of their host galaxy. B3 1445+410 is a low excitation emission line CSS radio galaxy with possibly a hybrid Fanaroff-Riley FRI/II (or Fat Double) radio morphology. The Chandra observations reveal a point-like source which is well fit with a power law consistent with emission from a Doppler boosted core. 3C 268.3 is a CSS broad line radio galaxy whose Chandra data are consistent spatially with a point source centered on the nucleus and spectrally with a double power-law model. PKS B1017-325 is a low excitation emission line radio galaxy with a bent double radio morphology. While from our new spectroscopic redshift, PKS B1017-325 falls outside the formal definition of a CSS, the XMNM-Newton observations are consistent with ISM emission with either a contribution from hot shocked gas or non-thermal jet emission. We compile selected radio and X-ray properties of the nine bona fide CSS radio galaxies with X-ray detections so far. We find that 2/9 show X-ray spectroscopic evidence for hot shocked gas. We note that the counts in the sources are low and the properties of the 2 sources with evidence for hot shocked gas are typical of the other CSS radio galaxies. We suggest that hot shocked gas may be typical of CSS radio galaxies due to their propagation through their host galaxies.<br />15 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in the Astrophysical Journal

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
O'Dea, C P, Worrall, D M, Tremblay, G R, Clarke, T E, Rothberg, B, Baum, S A, Christiansen, K P, Mullarkey, C A, Noel-Storr, J & Mittal, R 2017, ' Testing for shock-heated x-ray gas around compact steep spectrum radio galaxies ', Astrophysical Journal, vol. 851, no. 2, 87 . https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa9923, NASA Astrophysics Data System
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c617d2e1ef9d0f32bbac17e9a99e9aa4
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aa9923