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Nature of X-shaped sources

Authors :
Lal, D. V.
Hardcastle, M. J.
Kraft, R. P.
Cheung, C. C.
Lobanov, A. P.
Zensus, J. A.
Bhatnagar, S.
Rao, A. P.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

The nature of X-shaped sources is a matter of considerable debate: it has even been proposed that they provide evidence for black hole mergers$ / $spin reorientation, and therefore constrain the rate of strong gravitational wave events (Merritt & Ekers 2002). Based on morphological and spectral characteristics of these sources, currently a strong contender to explain the nature of these sources is the `alternative' model of Lal & Rao (2007), in which these sources consist of two pairs of jets, which are associated with two unresolved AGNs. Detailed morphological and spectral results on milliarcsecond-scales (mas) provide a crucial test of this model, and hence these sources are excellent candidates to study on mas; {\it i.e.}, to detect he presence/absence of double nuclei/AGNs, signs of helical/disrupted jets, thereby, to investigate spatially resolved/unresolved binary AGN systems and providing clues to understanding the physics of merging of AGNs on mas. We conducted a systematic study of a large sample of known X-shaped, comparison FR II radio galaxies, and newly discovered X-shaped candidate sources using Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope and Very Large Array at several radio frequencies. In our new observations of `comparison' FR II radio galaxies we find that almost all of our targets show standard spectral steepening as a function of distance from the hotspot. However, one source, 3C 321, has a low-surface-brightness extension that shows a flatter spectral index than the high-surface-brightness hotspots$ / $lobes, as found in `known' X-shaped sources.<br />Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the Conference "The Central Kiloparsec: Active Galactic Nuclei and Their Hosts", Ierapetra 4-6 June 2008, Greece, Memorie della Societa Astronomica Italiana

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.0904.2725
Document Type :
Working Paper