Inverse-Compton ghosts and double-lobed radio sources in the X-ray sky
P. Mocz, A.C. Fabian, Katherine M. Blundell

TL;DR
This paper models the evolution and distribution of powerful double-lobed radio galaxies and their X-ray counterparts, predicting their observable properties, contribution to the X-ray background, and the prevalence of inverse-Compton ghosts.
Contribution
It introduces an analytic model for the evolution of radio and X-ray emission in double-lobed radio galaxies, including the prediction of IC ghost sources and their cosmic distribution.
Findings
10-30% of X-ray double-lobed sources are IC ghosts.
Predicted volume filling factors depend on jet lifetime and particle energy.
Double-lobed sources outnumber X-ray clusters at z>2 with luminosities >10^44 erg/s.
Abstract
In this study we predict the total distributions of powerful (FR II) active double-lobed radio galaxies and ghost sources, and their observable distribution in the X-ray sky. We develop an analytic model for the evolution of the lobe emission at radio and X-ray energies. During jet activity, a double radio source emits synchrotron radiation in the radio and X-ray emission due to inverse-Compton (IC) upscattering by gamma~10^3 electrons of the cosmic microwave background. After the jets switch off, the radio luminosity (due to higher gamma electrons) falls faster than the X-ray luminosity and for some time the source appears as an IC ghost of a radio galaxy before becoming completely undetectable in the X-ray. With our model, for one set of typical parameters, we predict radio lobes occupy a volume fraction of the universe of 0.01, 0.03, 0.3 at z=2 (during the quasar era) of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
