In search of dying radio sources in the local universe
P. Parma, M. Murgia, H.R. de Ruiter, R. Fanti, K.-H. Mack, and F., Govoni

TL;DR
This study identifies and analyzes dying and restarted radio sources in the local universe using surveys and spectral modeling, revealing their typical ages and evolutionary phases to improve understanding of radio source life cycles.
Contribution
It provides the first substantial sample of dying radio sources, combining survey data and spectral modeling to estimate active and relic phase durations.
Findings
Six dying radio sources identified
Relic phase shorter than active phase by an order of magnitude
Active phase lasts 10^7 to 10^8 years
Abstract
Up till now very few dying sources were known, presumably because the dying phase is short at centimeter wavelengths. We therefore have tried to improve the statistics on sources that have ceased to be active, or are intermittently active. The latter sources would partly consist of a fossil radio plasma left over from an earlier phase of activity, plus a recently restarted core and radio jets. Improving the statistics of dying sources will give us a better handle on the evolution of radio sources, in particular the frequency and time scales of radio activity. We have used the WENSS and NVSS surveys, in order to find sources with steep spectral indices, associated with nearby elliptical galaxies. In the cross correlation we presently used only unresolved sources, with flux densities at 1.4 GHz larger than 10 mJy. The eleven candidates thus obtained were observed with the VLA in various…
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