High redshift FRII radio sources: large-scale X-ray environment
Elena Belsole (1,2), Diana M. Worrall (2), Martin J. Hardcastle (3),, Judith H. Croston (3)((1) Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge,, U.K.; (2) Department of Physics, University of Bristol, U.K.; (3) School of, Physics, Astronomy, Mathematics

TL;DR
This study examines the environments of high-redshift powerful radio galaxies and quasars, revealing most are in rich clusters, with implications for cluster surveys and insights into radio galaxy physics.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of the large-scale X-ray environments of high-redshift FRII radio sources using XMM-Newton and Chandra data.
Findings
Majority of sources in rich X-ray luminous clusters
No significant environmental difference based on jet orientation
Clusters show steeper entropy-temperature relation than local clusters
Abstract
We investigate the properties of the environment around 20 powerful radio galaxies and quasars at redshifts between 0.45 and 1. Using XMM-Newton and Chandra observations we probe the spatial distribution and the temperature of the cluster gas. We find that more than 60 per cent of powerful radio sources in the redshift range of our sample lie in a cluster of X-ray luminosity greater than 10^44 erg/s, and all but one of the narrow-line radio galaxies, for which the emission from the nucleus is obscured by a torus, lie in a cluster environment. Within the statistical uncertainties we find no significant difference in the properties of the environment as a function of the orientation to the line of sight of the radio jet. This is in agreement with unification schemes. Our results have important implications for cluster surveys, as clusters around powerful radio sources tend to be excluded…
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