학술논문

Deciphering the Morphological Origins of X-shaped Radio Galaxies: Numerical Modeling of Backflow versus Jet Reorientation
Document Type
article
Source
The Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series, Vol 268, Iss 2, p 49 (2023)
Subject
Shocks
Magnetohydrodynamical simulations
X-ray sources
Galaxy clusters
Relativistic jets
Astrophysics
QB460-466
Language
English
ISSN
1538-4365
0067-0049
Abstract
X-shaped radio galaxies (XRGs) develop when certain extragalactic jets deviate from their propagation path. An asymmetric ambient medium (backflow model) or complex active galactic nucleus activity (jet-reorientation model) enforcing the jet direction to deviate may cause these structures. In this context, the present investigation focuses on the modeling of XRGs by performing 3D relativistic magnetohydrodynamic simulations. We implement different jet-propagation models applying an initially identical jet-ambient medium configuration to understand distinctive features. This study, the first of its kind, demonstrates that all adopted models produce XRGs with notable properties, thereby challenging the notion of a universal model. Jet reorientation naturally explains several contentious properties of XRGs, including wing alignment along the ambient medium’s primary axis, development of collimated lobes, and the formation of noticeably longer wings than active lobes. These XRGs disrupt the cluster medium by generating isotropic shocks and channeling more energy than in the backflow scenario. Our synthetic thermal X-ray maps of the cluster medium reveal four clear elongated cavities associated with the wing-lobe alignment, regardless of projection effects, but they affect their age estimation. We show that the depth and geometric alignment of the evolved cavities may qualify as promising characteristics of XRGs, which may be used to disentangle different formation scenarios.