Hidden treasures in the unknown 3CR extragalactic radio sky: a multi-wavelength approach
V. Missaglia, F. Massaro, E. Liuzzo, A. Paggi, R. P. Kraft, W. R., Forman, A. Jimenez-Gallardo, J. P. Madrid, F. Ricci, C. Stuardi, B. J., Wilkes, S. A. Baum, C. P. O'Dea, J. Kuraszkiewicz, G. R. Tremblay, A., Maselli, A. Capetti, E. Sani, B. Balmaverde, D. E. Harris

TL;DR
This study provides a multi-wavelength analysis of seven unidentified 3CR extragalactic radio sources, revealing their X-ray, radio, infrared, and optical properties, including cluster membership and extended emissions, to better understand their nature.
Contribution
First comprehensive multi-wavelength characterization of previously unidentified 3CR radio sources, including new radio maps and X-ray spectral analysis.
Findings
Detected X-ray cores in all sources
Two sources are galaxy cluster members
Extended X-ray emission observed in two sources
Abstract
We present the analysis of multi-wavelength observations of seven extragalactic radio sources, listed as unidentified in the Third Cambridge Revised Catalog (3CR). X-ray observations, performed during Chandra Cycle 21, were compared to VLA, WISE and Pan-STARRS observations in the radio, infrared and optical bands, respectively. All sources in this sample lack a clear optical counterpart, and are thus missing their redshift and optical classification. In order to confirm the X-ray and infrared radio counterparts of core and extended components, here we present for the first time radio maps obtained manually reducing VLA archival data. As in previous papers on the Chandra X-ray snapshot campaign, we report X-ray detections of radio cores and two sources, out of the seven presented here, are found to be members of galaxy clusters. For these two cluster sources (namely, 3CR 409 and 3CR…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
