PRAiSE: Resolved spectral evolution in simulated radio sources
Patrick M. Yates-Jones, Ross J. Turner, Stanislav S. Shabala, and, Martin G. H. Krause

TL;DR
This paper introduces PRAiSE, a method for simulating spatially resolved spectral evolution in radio sources from AGN, accounting for adiabatic and radiative losses, and applies it to various simulated environments.
Contribution
The paper develops PRAiSE, a novel post-processing framework that models spectral evolution in synthetic radio sources using hydrodynamic simulations and the RAiSE formalism.
Findings
Radio source properties strongly depend on frequency and redshift.
Spectral index asymmetry can indicate environmental density.
Disrupted jets can still produce FRII morphology.
Abstract
We present a method for applying spatially resolved adiabatic and radiative loss processes to synthetic radio emission from hydrodynamic simulations of radio sources from active galactic nuclei (AGN). Lagrangian tracer particles, each representing an ensemble of electrons, are injected into simulations and the position, grid pressure, and time since the last strong shock are recorded. These quantities are used to track the losses of the electron packet through the radio source in a manner similar to the Radio AGN in Semi-analytic Environments (RAiSE) formalism, which uses global source properties to calculate the emissivity of each particle ex-situ. Freedom in the choice of observing parameters, including redshift, is provided through the post-processing nature of this approach. We apply this framework to simulations of jets in different environments, including asymmetric ones. We find…
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