The X-ray view of Giga-Hertz Peaked Spectrum Radio Galaxies
Olof Tengstrand (1,2), M.Guainazzi (1), A.Siemiginowska (3), N.Fonseca, Bonilla (1), A.Labiano (4), D.M.Worrall (5), P.Grandi (6), E.Piconcelli (7), ((1) ESAC-ESA, E; (2) University of Linkopping, S; (3) Harvard-CfA,, Cambridge, USA; (4) DAMIR-CSIC, Madrid

TL;DR
This study examines the X-ray properties of GPS galaxies, revealing high obscuration levels, their relation to radio luminosity, and supporting the idea that they are young radio sources evolving into classical FRII galaxies.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive X-ray analysis of a complete GPS galaxy sample, clarifying their emission origins and evolutionary status.
Findings
GPS galaxies are highly obscured in X-rays.
X-ray luminosity correlates with radio power, similar to FRI and FRII galaxies.
GPS galaxies likely evolve into classical FRII radio galaxies.
Abstract
This paper presents the X-ray properties of a flux- and volume-limited complete sample of 16 Giga-Hertz Peaked Spectrum (GPS) galaxies. This study addresses three basic questions in our understanding of the nature and evolution of GPS sources: a) What is the physical origin of the X-ray emission in GPS galaxies? b) What physical system is associated with the X-ray obscuration? c) What is the "endpoint" of the evolution of compact radio sources? We obtain a 100% (94%) detection fraction in the 0.5-2 keV (0.5-10 keV) energy band. GPS galaxy X-ray spectra are typically highly obscured. The X-ray column density is higher than the HI column density measured in the radio by a factor of 10 to 100. GPS galaxies lie well on the extrapolation to high radio powers of the correlation between radio and X-ray luminosity known in low-luminosity FRI radio galaxies. On the other hand, GPS galaxies…
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