论文标题
FR II射电星系周围的扩展X射线排放:热点,裂片和星系簇
Extended X-ray emission around FR II radio galaxies: hotspots, lobes and galaxy clusters
论文作者
论文摘要
我们对从修订后的第三个剑桥目录(3CR)Chandra快照调查发现的扩展X射线发射进行了系统分析,其红移在0.05至0.9之间。 我们的目的是(i)测试FR II射电星系周围存在X射线发射的存在,(ii)研究是否是由于宇宙微波背景(IC/CMB)引起的种子光子的反向综合散射引起的。 我们通过研究其形态来研究扩展的X射线排放的性质,并将我们的结果与低频无线电观察结果(即$ \ sim $ 150 MHz),在TGSS和Lofar档案馆中以及Pan-Starrs的光学图像进行了比较。此外,我们优化了3CR FR II射线星系中热点的X射线搜索。 我们发现沿无线电轴的统计学意义($> $> $ 3 $σ$置信度)的价格为$ \ sim $ 90%,并且以$ \ sim $ \ sim $ 60%的样本为垂直方向。我们确认在0.5-3 KEV中检测到7个热点。 在垂直于无线电轴的方向上的发射与沿无线电轴相当的情况下,我们建议基本的辐射过程是ICM的热发射。否则,主要的辐射过程可能是裂片中的非热IC/CMB发射。我们发现,非热IC/CMB是$ \ sim $ 70%来源中的主要过程,而来自ICM的热发射以$ \ sim $ 15%的含量为主导。
We present a systematic analysis of the extended X-ray emission discovered around 35 FR II radio galaxies from the revised Third Cambridge catalog (3CR) Chandra Snapshot Survey with redshifts between 0.05 to 0.9. We aimed to (i) test for the presence of extended X-ray emission around FR II radio galaxies, (ii) investigate if the extended emission origin is due to Inverse Compton scattering of seed photons arising from the Cosmic Microwave Background (IC/CMB) or to thermal emission from an intracluster medium (ICM) and (iii) test the impact of this extended emission on hotspot detection. We investigated the nature of the extended X-ray emission by studying its morphology and compared our results with low-frequency radio observations (i.e., $\sim$150 MHz), in the TGSS and LOFAR archives, as well as with optical images from Pan-STARRS. In addition, we optimized a search for X-ray counterparts of hotspots in 3CR FR II radio galaxies. We found statistically significant extended emission ($>$3$σ$ confidence level) along the radio axis for $\sim$90%, and in the perpendicular direction for $\sim$60% of our sample. We confirmed the detection of 7 hotspots in the 0.5 - 3 keV. In the cases where the emission in the direction perpendicular to the radio axis is comparable to that along the radio axis, we suggest that the underlying radiative process is thermal emission from ICM. Otherwise, the dominant radiative process is likely non-thermal IC/CMB emission from lobes. We found that non-thermal IC/CMB is the dominant process in $\sim$70% of the sources in our sample, while thermal emission from the ICM dominates in $\sim$15% of them.