Alignment in the orientation of LOFAR radio sources
E. Osinga, G. K. Miley, R. J. van Weeren, T. W. Shimwell, K. J., Duncan, M. J. Hardcastle, A. P. Mechev, H. J. A. R\"ottgering, C. Tasse, W., L. Williams

TL;DR
This study investigates the orientation of radio sources in LOFAR data, finding a 2D alignment at certain scales likely due to biases, but no true 3D alignment was observed, suggesting possible systematic effects.
Contribution
The paper provides the first large-scale statistical analysis of radio source orientations using LOFAR data, highlighting potential biases affecting observed alignments.
Findings
Significant 2D alignment at four degrees scale for bright sources
No significant 3D alignment detected
Potential biases or systematics influencing the 2D results
Abstract
Various studies have laid claim to finding an alignment of the polarization vectors or radio jets of active galactic nuclei (AGN) over large distances, but these results have proven controversial and so far, there is no clear explanation for this observed alignment. To investigate this case further, we tested the hypothesis that the position angles of radio galaxies are randomly oriented in the sky by using data from the Low-Frequency Array (LOFAR) Two-metre Sky Survey (LoTSS). A sample of 7,555 double-lobed radio galaxies was extracted from the list of 318,520 radio sources in the first data release of LoTSS at 150 MHz. We performed statistical tests for uniformity of the two-dimensional (2D) orientations for the complete 7,555 source sample. We also tested the orientation uniformity in three dimensions (3D) for the 4,212 source sub-sample with photometric or spectroscopic redshifts.…
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