A Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope/Chandra view of IRAS 09104+4109: A type 2 QSO in a cooling flow
Ewan O'Sullivan, Simona Giacintucci, Arif Babul, Somak Raychaudhury,, Tiziana Venturi, Chris Bildfell, Andisheh Mahdavi, J. B. R. Oonk, Norman, Murray, Henk Hoekstra, Megan Donahue

TL;DR
This study combines radio and X-ray observations to analyze the activity and impact of a type 2 QSO in a galaxy cluster, revealing jet realignment, cessation, and implications for cluster cooling and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It provides new multi-band radio data and analysis of jet activity history, linking QSO realignment to galaxy mergers and cluster cooling regulation.
Findings
Jets are no longer powered by the QSO, estimated age 120-160 Myr.
A recent, aligned radio source suggests renewed jet activity.
Jets' mechanical power balances cluster cooling without significant radiative heating.
Abstract
IRAS 09104+4109 is a rare example of a dust enshrouded type 2 QSO in the centre of a cool-core galaxy cluster. Previous observations of this z=0.44 system showed that as well as powering the hyper-luminous infrared emission of the cluster-central galaxy, the QSO is associated with a double-lobed radio source. However, the steep radio spectral index and misalignment between the jets and ionised optical emission suggested that the orientation of the QSO had recently changed. We use a combination of new, multi-band Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope observations and archival radio data to confirm that the jets are no longer powered by the QSO, and estimate their age to be 120-160 Myr. This is in agreement with the ~70-200 Myr age previously estimated for star-formation in the galaxy. Previously unpublished Very Long Baseline Array data reveal a 200 pc scale double radio source in the galaxy…
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