Three-dimensional simulations of X-ray cavities inflated by radio galaxies [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2101.03517


Vast cavities in the intergalactic medium are excavated by radio galaxies. The cavities appear as such in X-ray images because the external medium has been swept up, leaving a hot but low density bubble surrounding the radio lobes. We explore here the predicted thermal X-ray emission from a large set of high-resolution three dimensional simulations of radio galaxies driven by supersonic jets. We assume adiabatic non-relativistic hydrodynamics with injected straight and precessing jets of supersonic gas emitted from nozzles. Images of X-ray Bremsstrahlung emission tend to generate oval cavities in the soft keV bands and leading arcuate structures in hard X-rays. However, the cavity shape is sensitive to the jet-ambient density contrast, varying from concave-shaped at $\eta = 0.1$ to convex for $\eta = 0.0001$ where $\eta$ is the jet/ambient density ratio.
We find lateral ribs in the soft X-rays in certain cases and propose this as an explanation for those detected in the vicinity of Cygnus\,A. In bi-lobed or X-shaped sources and in curved or deflected jets, the strongest X-ray emission is not associated with the hotspot but with the relic lobe or deflection location. This is because the hot high-pressure and dense high-compression regions do not coincide. Directed toward the observer, the cavity becomes a deep round hole surrounded by circular ripples. With short radio-mode outbursts with a duty cycle of 10\% , the intracluster medium simmers with low Mach number shocks widely dissipating the jet energy in between active jet episodes.

Read this paper on arXiv…

M. Donohoe
Tue, 12 Jan 21
30/90

Comments: 14 pages, 15 figures, 2 table; accepted for publication to Monthly Notices of the Total Astronomical Society