The high-redshift radio galaxy 3C 294 at low frequencies: radio detection of the X-ray Ghost
Vijay H. Mahatma, Andrew C. Fabian, and Leah K. Morabito

TL;DR
This study reports the first radio detection of the X-ray Ghost around the high-redshift galaxy 3C 294, revealing low-energy electron populations and providing insights into AGN activity and plasma conditions at early cosmic times.
Contribution
It presents the first low-frequency radio detection of the X-ray Ghost at high redshift and models the electron populations responsible for the observed emissions.
Findings
Radio and X-ray emissions are co-spatial and explained by synchrotron and inverse-Compton processes.
Electrons responsible for up-scattering CMB photons have very low Lorentz factors.
Evidence of restarted activity in the inner hotspots and persistent energy in outer hotspots.
Abstract
We report on the very first radio detection associated with the peculiar hourglass-morphology X-rays surrounding 3C 294 at z=1.8. Using International Low Frequency Array (LOFAR) data at 144 MHz and Chandra data at 0.3-6 keV, we find that the co-spatial diffuse radio and X-ray emission is well described by synchrotron and inverse-Compton processes by the same electron population. Through modelling of this rare low-energy plasma, we find that the most defining property of the electrons up-scattering CMB photons at this redshift is very low electron Lorentz factors ( and ) in the lobe: deep low frequency (<150 MHz) observations are critical to the detection of radio lobes at high redshift. The physical conditions imply a total energy in the diffuse emission significantly greater than that implied by the temperature of the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
