LOFAR Measures the Hotspot Advance Speed of the High-Redshift Blazar S5 0836+710
Alexander Kappes, Manel Perucho, Matthias Kadler, Paul Ray Burd, Laura, Vega-Garc\'ia, Marcus Br\"uggen

TL;DR
This study uses LOFAR radio observations to measure the hotspot advance speed of a high-redshift blazar, revealing insights into jet dynamics, age, and the intergalactic medium in the early universe.
Contribution
First measurement of hotspot advance speed in a high-redshift blazar using LOFAR, linking jet evolution to intergalactic medium density and jet stability.
Findings
Hotspot advance speed estimated at 0.01-0.036c.
Detected a steep-spectrum halo around the core.
Indications of jet deceleration and higher ambient medium density.
Abstract
Our goal is to study the termination of an AGN jet in the young universe and to deduce physical parameters of the jet and the intergalactic medium. We use LOFAR to image the long-wavelength radio emission of the high-redshift blazar S5 0836+710 on arcsecond scales between 120 MHz and 160 MHz. The LOFAR image shows a compact unresolved core and a resolved emission region about 1.5 arcsec to the southwest of the radio core. This structure is in general agreement with previous higher-frequency radio observations with MERLIN and the VLA. The southern component shows a moderately steep spectrum with a spectral index of about while the spectral index of the core is flat to slightly inverted. In addition, we detect for the first time a resolved steep-spectrum halo with a spectral index of about surrounding the core. The arcsecond-scale radio structure of S5 0836+710 can be…
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