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XMM results in radio-galaxy physics Judith Croston CEA Saclay, Service d’Astrophysique EPIC consortium meeting, Ringberg, 12/04/05 In collaboration with: • Martin Hardcastle (Hertfordshire) • Mark Birkinshaw, Diana Worrall, Elena Belsole, Dan Evans (Bristol) • Dan Harris (CfA) Radio-galaxy morphologies Outstanding problems • Magnetic field strengths: can’t be directly measured from radio synchrotron emission, so equipartition ( min. total energy) commonly assumed • Particle content: electron-positron or electron-proton? • Dynamics: – FRIs: missing pressure? – FRIIs: supersonic or not? Solving these problems is essential to understanding radio-galaxy impact in groups and clusters. Radio galaxies in X-rays • Jets and hotspots (typically need Chandra resolution) • Radio lobes: – – – – Non-thermal emission via inverse Compton scattering Seed photons from CMBR, AGN nucleus and SSC Measure internal energy density, magnetic field strengths Infer particle content • Environments: – Radio galaxies are found in groups and clusters – Measure external density and pressure – Comparison with internal radio-lobe properties to study jet and lobe dynamics. – Temperature structure => heating 3C 223 z=0.14 XMM observations of IC emission from FRII lobes • Lobe emission from two nearby FRIIs (Croston et al. 2004, MNRAS 353 879) • IC scattering of CMB; B ~ Beq 3C 284, z=0.25 • Belsole et al. (2004) found similar results for three high-z FRIIs observed with XMM. • Grandi et al. (2003) detected lobe emission from Pic A – origin may be thermal or IC. Chandra and XMM study (Croston et al. 2005, ApJ in press, astro-ph/0503203) • Sample of 33 radio galaxies observed by Chandra and XMM. • Lobe emission from 75% of sources. • Magnetic fields between (0.3 – 1.3) Beq, with peak at B ~ 0.7 Beq. • Internal energy always within a factor of two of minimum value. • Energetically dominant proton population unlikely. XMM observations of environments 3C 66B 3C 449 • FRI environments show: Croston et al. 2003 MNRAS 346 1041; 2005 MNRAS 357 279, and Evans et al. 2005 MNRAS, in press, astro-ph/0502183) – SB deficits at radio lobes – Dense environments = large, rounded lobes – Less dense = narrow plumes – Heating (see later) Dynamics and particle content in FRIs • XMM confirms Einstein/ROSAT results for FRIs: Pext >> Pint(equipartition) extra particle content/departure from equipartition. • IC upper limit rules out electron domination to provide additional pressure. • Thermal upper limit rules out entrained gas with Tenv . • Heated, entrained material (T ~ 3 – 5 keV) most plausible. • Relativistic protons possible, but need p/e ~ 200. FRII environments • Also detected with XMM: – Groups rather than clusters – No evidence for shock-heating – Pext ~ Pint (measured from IC) => Not supersonically expanding? XMM detects shock heating • XMM and Chandra observations show radio-lobe shock heating of the X-ray environment from the smallscale lobes of Cen A (Kraft et al. 2003). (pictures from Kraft et al. 2003) AGN in cooling flows • M87 has thermal substructure associated with radio lobes (e.g. Belsole et al. 2001). • Is temperature structure consistent with models for counteracting cooling flows (e.g. Molendi 2002, Kaiser 2003, Ghizzardi et al. 2004)? => AGN energy input (rising bubbles/mixing) can balance cooling and produces multiphase medium. Extended heating in FRI atmospheres • XMM-observed RG environments significantly hotter than LX/TX prediction. • ROSAT study: – RL groups hotter than RQ groups of the same luminosity. – 50% of E-dominated groups (= X-ray bright) are RL. (Croston et al. 2005, MNRAS, 357 279) Ongoing projects with XMM • Inner jet dynamics – Testing jet models (Laing & Bridle 2002) by measuring environmental properties. – Investigating role of environment in producing stable jets. • FRI environments – Completing sample that includes all common morphologies to understand jet/environment interactions in whole population. • Archive study of heating – Large fraction of ROSAT sample now observed by XMM. – Follow up heating study with better Lx and Tx constraints, detailed study of gas distribution in radio-loud and quiet groups.