23 research outputs found
An HI study of three long-tailed irregular galaxies in the cluster Abell1367
We present the results on the distribution and kinematics of H\sc{i} gas
with higher sensitivity and in one case of higher spectral resolution as well
than reported earlier, of three irregular galaxies CGCG 097073, 097079 and
097087 (UGC 06697) in the cluster Abell 1367. These galaxies are known to
exhibit long (5075 kpc) tails of radio continuum and optical emission lines
(H) pointing away from the cluster centre and arcs of starformation on
the opposite sides of the tails. These features as well as the H{\sc i}
properties, with two of the galaxies (CGCG 097073 and 097079) exhibiting
sharper gradients in H{\sc i} intensity on the side of the tails, are
consistent with the H{\sc i} gas being affected by the ram pressure of the
intracluster medium. However the H{\sc i} emission in all the three galaxies
extends to much smaller distances than the radio-continuum and H tails,
and are possibly still bound to the parent galaxies. Approximately 2030 per
cent of the H{\sc i} mass is seen to accumulate on the downstream side due to
the effects of ram pressure.Comment: 19 pages, 19 figures, 3 tables, accepted for publication in the
Bulletin of the Astronomical Society of Indi
The impact of a young radio galaxy : Clues from the cosmic ray electron population
In the framework of hierarchical structure formation, active galactic nuclei (AGN) feedback shapes the galaxy luminosity function. Low luminosity, galaxy-scale double radio sources are ideal targets to investigate the interplay between AGN feedback and star formation. We use Very Large Array and BIMA millimetre-wave array observations to study the radio continuum emission of NGC 3801 between 1.4 and 112.4 GHz. We find a prominent spectral break at 10 GHz, where the spectrum steepens as expected from cosmic ray electron (CRe) ageing. Using the equipartition magnetic field and fitting JP models locally, we create a spatially resolved map of the spectral age of the CRe population. The spectral age of τint =2.0±0.2Myr agrees within a factor of 2 with the dynamical age of the expanding X-ray emitting shells. The spectral age varies only little across the lobes, requiring an effective mixing process of the CRe such as a convective backflow of magnetized plasma. The jet termination points have a slightly younger CRe spectral age, hinting at in situ CRe re-acceleration. Our findings support the scenario where the supersonically expanding radio lobes heat the interstellar medium (ISM) of NGC 3801 via shock waves, and, as their energy is comparable to the energy of the ISM, are clearly able to influence the galaxy's further evolution.Peer reviewe
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Mode of accretion in episodic radio galaxies and the dynamics of their outer relic lobes
We present X-ray observations with the X-ray Multi-Mirror Mission Newton (XMM-Newton) telescope of three Double-Double Radio Galaxies (DDRGs). We have detected the core, lobes and the environment of our sample DDRGs in X-rays. We examine the relationships between the radio and X-ray emission and attribute the X-ray emission from the lobes to the inverse-Compton scattering of cosmic microwave background (CMB) photons against the leptons of the radio lobes. The magnetic field strength of the lobes is close to the equipartition value. The X-ray spectrum of the cores of the DDRGs consists of an unabsorbed soft power-law component and no sign of hard power law components. The soft unabsorbed component is likely to be related to the radio jets. In optical wavebands, there is no strong [O III] lines observed and the host galaxies are not detected in all four bands (namely 2.4, 4.6, 12, 22 µm) of Wide-Field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE) survey. This shows that they are low excitation radio galaxies. These DDRGs have poor group scale ambient media. We discuss the implications of this observation for models of the episodic activity in DDRGs
NGC3801 caught in the act: A post-merger starforming early-type galaxy with AGN-jet feedback
In the current models of galaxy formation and evolution, AGN feedback is
crucial to reproduce galaxy luminosity function, colour-magnitude relation and
M-sigma relation. However, if AGN-feedback can indeed expel and heat up
significant amount of cool molecular gas and consequently quench star
formation, is yet to be demonstrated observationally. Only in four cases so far
(Cen A, NGC 3801, NGC 6764 and Mrk 6), X-ray observations have found evidences
of jet-driven shocks heating the ISM. We chose the least-explored galaxy, NGC
3801, and present the first ultraviolet imaging and stellar population
analysisis of this galaxy from GALEX data. We find this merger-remnant
early-type galaxy to have an intriguing spiral-wisp of young star forming
regions (age ranging from 100--500 Myr). Taking clues from dust/PAH, HI and CO
emission images we interpret NGC 3801 to have a kinamatically decoupled core or
an extremely warped gas disk. From the HST data we also show evidence of
ionised gas outflow similar to that observed in HI and molecular gas (CO) data,
which may have caused the decline of star formation leading to the red optical
colour of the galaxy. However, from these panchromatic data we interpret that
the expanding shock shells from the young (2.4 million years) radio jets
are yet to reach the outer gaseous regions of the galaxy. It seems, we observe
this galaxy at a rare stage of its evolutionary sequence where post-merger star
formation has already declined and new powerful jet feedback is about to affect
the gaseous star forming outer disk within the next 10 Myr, to further
transform it into a red-and-dead early-type galaxy.Comment: 5 pages letter paper, 4 figures, 1 table, (submitted
A radio study of the superwind galaxy NGC1482
We present multifrequency radio continuum as well as HI observations of the
superwind galaxy NGC1482, with both the GMRT and the VLA. This galaxy has a
remarkable hourglass-shaped optical emission line outflow as well as bi-polar
soft X-ray bubbles on opposite sides of the galactic disk. The low-frequency,
lower-resolution radio observations show a smooth structure. From the
non-thermal emission, we estimate the available energy in supernovae, and
examine whether this would be adequate to drive the observed superwind outflow.
The high-frequency, high-resolution radio images of the central starburst
region located at the base of the superwind bi-cone shows one prominent peak
and more extended emission with substructure. This image has been compared with
the infrared, optical red-continuum, H_alpha, and, soft and hard X-ray images
from Chandra. The peak of infrared emission is the only feature which is
coincident with the prominent radio peak, and possibly defines the centre of
the galaxy. The HI observations with the GMRT show two blobs of emission on
opposite sides of the central region. These are rotating about the centre of
the galaxy and are located at ~2.4 kpc from it. In addition, these observations
also reveal a multicomponent HI-absorption profile against the central region
of the radio source, with a total width of ~250 km/s. The extreme blue- and
red-shifted absorption components are at 1688 and 1942 km/s respectively, while
the peak absorption is at 1836 km/s. This is consistent with the heliocentric
systemic velocity of 1850+/-20 km/s, estimated from a variety of observations.
We discuss possible implications of these results.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in MNRA