Dying Radio Sources in Clusters
M. Murgia, P. Parma, K.-H. Mack, H.R. de Ruiter, R. Fanti, F. Govoni,, A. Tarchi, S. Giacintucci, M. Markevitch

TL;DR
This study investigates five nearby 'dying' radio galaxies in clusters, revealing extended active phases, the presence of faint cores, and suggesting environmental factors in clusters prolonging the dying phase of radio sources.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the lifecycle of radio galaxies in clusters, highlighting environmental effects on their fading timescales and duty cycles.
Findings
Dying radio sources are located at cluster centers.
Fading lobes last longer in dense environments.
Some sources show both active cores and fossil lobes.
Abstract
We present the study of five `dying' nearby radio galaxies belonging to the WENSS minisurvey and to the B2 bright catalogs: WNB1734+6407, WNB1829+6911, WNB1851+5707, B2 0120+33, and B2 1610+29. These sources have been selected on the basis of their extremely steep broad-band radio spectra. The modeling of the integrated spectra and the deep spectral index images obtained with the VLA confirmed that in these sources the central engine has ceased to be active for a significant fraction of their lifetime although their extended lobes have not yet completely faded away. We found that WNB1851+5707 is in reality composed by two distinct dying galaxies, which appear blend together as a single source in the WENSS. In the cases of WNB1829+6911 and B2 0120+33, the fossil radio lobes are seen in conjunction with a currently active core. A very faint core is detected also in a MERLIN image of…
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