Searching for the inverse-Compton emission from bright cluster-centre radio galaxies
M. J. Hardcastle, J. H. Croston

TL;DR
This study uses deep X-ray observations of bright cluster-centre radio galaxies to search for inverse-Compton emission, providing constraints on electron populations and magnetic fields, with potential implications for understanding lobe composition.
Contribution
It presents the first robust upper limits on inverse-Compton emission in Hydra A and Hercules A, and suggests environmental effects influence lobe particle content in Cygnus A.
Findings
Upper limits on electron energy density in Hydra A and Hercules A
Possible detection of inverse-Compton emission in Cygnus A
Environmental factors may affect lobe composition in Cygnus A
Abstract
We use deep archival Chandra and XMM-Newton observations of three of the brightest cluster-centre radio galaxies in the sky, Cygnus A, Hercules A and Hydra A, to search for inverse-Compton emission from the population of electrons responsible for the low-frequency radio emission. Using simulated observations, we derive robust estimates for the uncertainties on the normalization of an inverse-Compton component in the presence of the variations in background thermal temperature actually seen in our target objects. Using these, together with the pressures external to the lobes, we are able to place interesting upper limits on the fraction of the energy density in the lobes of Hydra A and Her A that can be provided by a population of relativistic electrons with standard properties, assuming that the magnetic field is not dominant; these limits are consistent with the long-standing idea that…
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