Simulations of bent-double radio sources in galaxy groups
Brian J. Morsony (1), Jacob J. Miller (1,2), Sebastian Heinz (1),, Emily Freeland (3,4), Eric Wilcots (1), Marcus Brueggen (5,6), Mateusz, Ruszkowski (7) ((1) UW Madison, (2) CU Boulder, (3) Texas A&M, (4) Stockholm, University, (5) Jacobs University Bremen

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution 3D simulations of AGN jets to develop formulas for jet curvature and IGM density measurement, highlighting observational limitations and potential for X-ray detection.
Contribution
The paper introduces a general formula for jet curvature radius and assesses the accuracy of IGM density measurements from bent-double radio sources.
Findings
Jet curvature varies by about 25% over time.
Radio trail may be detectable in lower resolution observations.
X-ray emission from sources in dense environments should be detectable with Chandra.
Abstract
Bent-double radio sources have been used as a probe to measure the density of intergalactic gas in galaxy groups. We carry out a series of high-resolution, 3D simulations of AGN jets moving through an external medium with a constant density in order to develop a general formula for the radius of curvature of the jets, and to determine how accurately the density of the intra-group medium (IGM) can be measured. Our simulations produce curved jets ending in bright radio lobes with an extended trail of low surface brightness radio emission. The radius of curvature of the jets varies with time by only about 25%. The radio trail seen in our simulations is typically not detected in known sources, but may be detectable in lower resolution radio observations. The length of this tail can be used to determine the age of the AGN. We also use our simulation data to derive a formula for the kinetic…
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