Abstract

The Suzaku observation of a giant radio galaxy 3C 35 revealed faint extended X-ray emission, associated with its radio lobes and/or host galaxy. After careful subtraction of the X-ray and non-X-ray background and contaminating X-ray sources, the X-ray spectrum of the faint emission was reproduced by a sum of the power-law (PL) and soft thermal components. The soft component was attributed to the thermal plasma emission from the host galaxy. The photon index of the PL component, Γ=1.350.86+0.56\Gamma = 1.35_{-0.86}^{+0.56}0.10+0.11_{-0.10}^{+0.11} where the first and second errors represent the statistical and systematic ones, was found to agree with the synchrotron radio index from the lobes, ΓR=1.7\Gamma_{\rm R} = 1.7. Thus, the PL component was attributed to the inverse Compton (IC) X-rays from the synchrotron electrons in the lobes. The X-ray flux density at 1 keV was derived as 13.6±5.43.6+4.013.6\pm 5.4_{-3.6}^{+4.0} nJy with the photon index fixed at the radio value. The X-ray surface brightness from these lobes (0.2\sim 0.2 nJy arcmin2^{-2}) is lowest among the lobes studied through the IC X-ray emission. In combination with the synchrotron radio flux density, 7.5±0.27.5 \pm 0.2 Jy at 327.4 MHz, the electron energy density spatially averaged over the lobes was evaluated to be the lowest among those radio galaxies, as ue=(5.8±2.31.7+1.9)×1014u_{\rm e} = (5.8 \pm 2.3 _{-1.7}^{+1.9}) \times 10^{-14} ergs cm3^{-3} over the electron Lorentz factor of 10310^{3} -- 10510^{5}. The magnetic energy density was calculated as um=(3.11.0+2.5u_{\rm m}=(3.1_{-1.0}^{+2.5}0.9+1.4)×1014_{-0.9}^{+1.4}) \times 10^{-14} ergs cm3^{-3}, corresponding to the magnetic field strength of 0.880.16+0.310.88_{-0.16}^{+0.31}0.14+0.19_{-0.14}^{+0.19} μ\muG. These results suggest that the energetics in the 3C 35 lobes are nearly consistent with equipartition between the electrons and magnetic fields.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, accepted for Ap

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