Three-dimensional simulations of X-ray cavities inflated by radio galaxies
Michael D. Smith andJustin Donohoe

TL;DR
This paper uses high-resolution 3D simulations to study the X-ray cavities created by radio galaxy jets, revealing how cavity shapes and X-ray features depend on jet properties and ambient conditions.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the morphology and X-ray emission patterns of cavities formed by radio galaxy jets through detailed 3D hydrodynamic simulations.
Findings
Cavity shapes vary from concave to convex depending on jet/ambient density ratio.
Lateral ribs in soft X-rays may explain features near Cygnus A.
X-ray emission is often stronger in relic lobes than hotspots.
Abstract
Vast cavities in the intergalactic medium are excavated by radio galaxies. The cavities appear as such in X-ray images because the external medium has been swept up, leaving a hot but low density bubble surrounding the radio lobes. We explore here the predicted thermal X-ray emission from a large set of high-resolution three dimensional simulations of radio galaxies driven by supersonic jets. We assume adiabatic non-relativistic hydrodynamics with injected straight and precessing jets of supersonic gas emitted from nozzles. Images of X-ray Bremsstrahlung emission tend to generate oval cavities in the soft keV bands and leading arcuate structures in hard X-rays. However, the cavity shape is sensitive to the jet-ambient density contrast, varying from concave-shaped at to convex for where is the jet/ambient density ratio. We find lateral ribs in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
