Shocks, Seyferts and the SNR connection: a Chandra observation of the Circinus galaxy
Beatriz Mingo, Martin J. Hardcastle, Judith H. Croston, Daniel A., Evans, Preeti Kharb, Ralph P. Kraft, Emil Lenc

TL;DR
This study uses Chandra X-ray observations of the Circinus galaxy to reveal shock-driven outflows and edge-brightened shells, drawing parallels with supernova remnants and advancing understanding of AGN feedback mechanisms.
Contribution
First detailed X-ray imaging of Circinus's radio lobes showing shock-induced shells, linking AGN outflows to SNR-like shock phenomena and scaling relations with radio power.
Findings
Edge-brightened shells observed in X-ray and radio.
Shell Mach numbers estimated between 2.7-5.3.
Shell temperatures around 0.74-1.8 keV.
Abstract
We analyse new Chandra observations of the nearest (D=4 Mpc) Seyfert 2 active galaxy, Circinus, and match them to pre-existing radio, infrared and optical data to study the kpc-scale emission. The proximity of Circinus allows us to observe in striking detail the structure of the radio lobes, revealing for the first time edge-brightened emission both in X-rays and radio. After considering various other possible scenarios, we show that this extended emission in Circinus is most likely caused by a jet-driven outflow, which is driving shells of strongly shocked gas into the halo of the host galaxy. In this context, we estimate Mach numbers M=2.7-3.6 and M=2.8-5.3 for the W and E shells respectively. We derive temperatures of 0.74 (+0.06, -0.05) keV and 0.8-1.8 keV for the W and E shells, and an expansion velocity of ~900-950 km/s. We estimate that the total energy (thermal and kinetic)…
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