The LOFAR view of NGC 3998, a sputtering AGN
Sarrvesh S. Sridhar, Raffaella Morganti, Kristina Nyland, Bradley S., Frank, Jeremy Harwood, Tom Oosterloo

TL;DR
This study uses LOFAR radio observations to analyze the structure and spectral properties of the low-power, core-dominated radio galaxy NGC 3998, revealing insights into jet disruption and the nature of low surface brightness lobes.
Contribution
It provides detailed low-frequency imaging of NGC 3998, demonstrating that low surface brightness lobes can be active and fed by sputtering jets, challenging the idea they are solely remnants.
Findings
Lobes show an optically thin spectral index (~0.6).
Rapid jet decollimation and turbulence are inferred.
Low surface brightness lobes may be active, not remnants.
Abstract
Low-power radio sources dominate the radio sky. They tend to be small in size and core-dominated, but the origin of their properties and the evolution of their radio plasma are not well constrained. Interestingly, there is mounting evidence that low-power radio sources can significantly impact their surrounding gaseous medium and, therefore, may be more relevant for galaxy evolution than previously thought. In this paper, we present low radio frequency observations obtained with LOFAR at 147 MHz of the radio source hosted by NGC 3998. This is a rare example of a low-power source which is extremely core-dominated, but which has two large-scale lobes of low surface brightness. We combine the new 147 MHz image with available 1400 MHz data to derive the spectral index over the source. Despite the low surface brightness, reminiscent of remnant structures, the lobes show an optically thin…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
