2005/9/28 X-ray Universe 2005 1 The electron and magnetic field energies in the east lobe of the radio galaxy Fornax A, measured with XMM-Newton. Naoki.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
(2) Profile of the Non-Thermal Filaments of SNRs =>High Energy Particle Acceleration =>High Energy Particle Acceleration In all the SNRs & GC Non Thermal.
Advertisements

Front X-ray Studies of Galaxies and Galaxy Systems Jesper Rasmussen Ph.D. Defence Astronomical Observatory, Univ. of Copenhagen 17th March 2004.
Radio Mode Feedback in Giant Elliptical Galaxies Paul Nulsen (CfA), Christine Jones (CfA), William Forman (CfA), Eugene Churazov (MPA), Laurence David.
X-ray and optical detection of the radio bent jet in 3C 17 Radio Galaxies in the Chandra Era F. Massaro & D. E. Harris, M. Chiaberge, P. Grandi, F. D.
Deep Chandra and XMM-Newton Observations of NGC 4472 R. P. Kraft, S. W. Randall, W. R. Forman, P. E. J. Nulsen, C. Jones, A. Bogdan, M. J. Hardcastle,
An XMM-Newton Study of the Centaurus A Northern Middle Radio Lobe R. P. Kraft, W. R. Forman, M. J. Hardcastle, M. Birkinshaw, J. H. Croston, C. Jones,
Emissions from Shells Associated with Dying Radio Sources @ Workshop on East-Asian Collaboration for the SKA /2 Hirotaka Ito YITP, Kyoto University.
Discovery of an FRII microquasar Manfred Pakull (Strasbourg Observatory) Jess Broderick (Southampton) Stephane Corbel (Université Paris 7 and CEA Saclay.
Evolution of a Powerful Radio Loud Quasar 3C186 and its Impact on the Cluster Environment at z=1 Aneta Siemiginowska Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
The Sharpest Spatial View of a Black Hole Accretion Flow from the Chandra X-ray Visionary Project Observation of the NGC 3115 Bondi Region Jimmy Irwin.
The Radio/X-ray Interaction in Abell 2029 Tracy Clarke (Univ. of Virginia) Collaborators: Craig Sarazin (UVa), Elizabeth Blanton (UVa)
24-28 October 2005 Elena Belsole University of Bristol Distant clusters of Galaxies Ringberg Workshop X-ray constraints on cluster-scale emission around.
Hard X-ray Emission and IC in Coma and Abell 3667 from Suzaku and XMM-Newton Craig Sarazin University of Virginia A3667 XIS images and radio contours Coma.
Luigina Feretti Istituto di Radioastronomia CNR Bologna, Italy Radio observations of cluster mergers X-Ray and Radio Connections, Santa Fe, NM February.
Hamburg, 18 September 2008 LOFAR Wokshop1/44 Thermal and non-thermal emission from galaxy clusters: X-ray and LOFAR observations Chiara Ferrari Observatoire.
July 7-11, 2008 Radio Galaxies in the Chandra Era 1 Hard X-ray study of lobes of radio galaxy Fornax A Naoki Isobe (RIKEN/Suzaku Help Desk) Makoto Tashiro,
VLBI Imaging of a High Luminosity X-ray Hotspot Leith Godfrey Research School of Astronomy & Astrophysics Australian National University Geoff Bicknell,
Particles and Fields in Lobes of Radio Galaxies Naoki Isobe (NASDA, MAXI Mission) Makoto Tashiro (Saitama Univ.) Kazuo Makishima (Univ. of Tokyo) Hidehiro.
Centaurus A Kraft, Hardcastle, Croston, Worrall, Birkinshaw, Nulsen, Forman, Murray, Goodger, Sivakoff,Evans, Sarazin, Harris, Gilfanov, Jones X-ray composite.
Facts about SNe and their remnants Evolution of an SNR sensitively depends on its environment. Observed SNRs are typically produced by SNe in relative.
3C 186 A Luminous Quasar in the Center of a Strong Cooling Core Cluster at z>1 Aneta Siemiginowska CfA Tom Aldcroft (CfA) Steve Allen (Stanford) Jill Bechtold.
XMM results in radio-galaxy physics Judith Croston CEA Saclay, Service d’Astrophysique EPIC consortium meeting, Ringberg, 12/04/05.
The Long, Bright Extended X-ray Jet of OJ287 Alan Marscher & Svetlana Jorstad Boston University Research Web Page:
Timing Analysis of The Geminga Pulsar Huang Hsiu-hui Institute of Physics, NTHU.
Extended Radio Sources in Clusters of Galaxies Elizabeth Blanton University of Virginia.
Discovery of New SNR Candidates in the Galactic Center Region with ASCA and Chandra Atsushi Senda 1, Hiroshi Murakami 2, Aya Bamba 1, Shin-ichiro Takagi.
Annalisa Bonafede PhD student at IRA Radio Astronomy Institute Bologna (Italy) With: L. Feretti, G. Giovannini, M. Murgia, F. Govoni, G. B.Taylor, H. Ebeling,
Low frequency radio observations of galaxy groups With acknowledgements to: R. Athreya, P. Mazzotta, T. Clarke, W. Forman, C. Jones, T. Ponman S.Giacintucci.
Chandra Observations of Radio Sources in Clusters: Impact on the ICM and Tracers of High-z Systems Elizabeth Blanton University of Virginia Collaborators:
An X-ray Study of the Bright Supernova Remnant G with XMM-Newton SNRs and PWNe in the Chandra Era Boston, MA – July 8 th, 2009 Daniel Castro,
Bubble heating in groups and clusters: the nature of ghost cavities Nazirah Jetha 1, Martin Hardcastle 2, Simon Weston 2, Arif Babul 3, Ewan O’Sullivan.
Radio lobes of Pictor A: an X-ray spatially resolved study G.Migliori(1,2,3), P.Grandi(2), G.C.G.Palumbo(1), G.Brunetti(4), C.Stanghellini(4) (1) Bologna.
Radio-loud AGN energetics with LOFAR Judith Croston LOFAR Surveys Meeting 17/6/09.
The luminous X-ray hotspot in 4C 74.26: jet dynamics at work Mary Erlund Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge, UK A.C. Fabian, K.M. Blundell, C. Moss and.
The Environments of Galaxies: from Kiloparsecs to Megaparsecs August 2004 Cool Cores in Galaxy Groups Ewan O’Sullivan Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
The Galactic Center at Low Radio Frequencies Namir Kassim (NRL) Crystal Brogan (IfA) J. Lazio (NRL), Ted LaRosa (Kennesaw State), M. Nord (NRL/UNM), W.
Jet/environment interactions in FR-I and FR-II radio galaxies Judith Croston with Martin Hardcastle, Mark Birkinshaw and Diana Worrall.
Suzaku, XMM-Newton and Chandra Observations of the Central Region of M 31 Hiromitsu Takahashi (Hiroshima University, Japan) M. Kokubun, K. Makishima, A.
A multi-colour survey of NGC253 with XMM-Newton Robin Barnard, Lindsey Shaw Greening & Ulrich Kolb The Open University.
Extended X-ray Emissions from the Radio Galaxies Centaurus B and Fornax A Makoto Tashiro 1, Naoki Isobe 2, Masaya Suzuki 1 Kouichi Ito 1, Keiichi Abe 1,
Quasar large scale jets: Fast and powerful or weak and slow, but efficient accelerators? Markos Georganopoulos 1,2 1 University of Maryland, Baltimore.
Observations of SNR RX J with CANGAROO-II telescope Kyoto, Dec., 16, 2003 H. Katagiri, R. Enomoto, M. Mori, L. Ksenofontov Institute for cosmic.
This composite X-ray (blue)/radio (pink) image of the galaxy cluster Abell 400 shows radio jets immersed in a vast cloud of multimillion degree X-ray emitting.
Roland Crocker Monash University The  -ray and radio glow of the Central Molecular Zone and the Galactic centre magnetic field.
Acceleration and Energy Transport in the AGN jets: from sub-pc to kpc scale Jun Kataoka Tokyo Institute of Technology - Acceleration site in the universe.
Magnetic fields and particle content in FRII radio sources Judith Croston CEA Saclay, Service d’Astrophysique, France URJA2005, Banff, 12 th July 2005.
Chandra Observation of the Failed Cluster Candidate K. Hayashida, H. Katayama (Osaka University), K. Mori (Penn State University), T.T. Takeuchi.
Internal Irradiation of the Sgr B2 Molecular Cloud Casey Law Northwestern University, USA A reanalysis of archived X-ray and radio observations to understand.
Aug , 2006 KJYAM 慶州 1 Suzaku Observation of Nearby Seyfert 2 Galaxy NGC 4945 Naoki Isobe (RIKEN, Japan) and Suzaku NGC 4945 team.
Search for Synchrotron X-ray Dominated SNRs with the ASCA Galactic Plane Survey Aya Bamba 1, Masaru Ueno 1, Katsuji Koyama 1, Shigeo Yamauchi 2, Ken Ebisawa.
The Quasar : A Laboratory for Particle Acceleration Svetlana Jorstad IAR, Boston U Alan Marscher IAR, Boston U Jonathan Gelbord U. Durham Herman.
Gas in Galaxy Clusters Tracy Clarke (NRAO) June 5, 2002 Albuquerque, AAS.
Progenitor stars of supernovae Poonam Chandra Royal Military College of Canada.
C. Y. Hui & W. Becker X-Ray Studies of the Central Compact Objects in Puppis-A & RX J Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, Giessenbachstrasse.
N. Isobe (Kyoto University; ) K. Ohsuga (NAOJ), K. Makishima, P. Gandhi (RIKEN), T. Mizuno (Hiroshima University), A. Kubota.
Fermi LAT Discovery of Gamma-rays from the Giant Radio Lobes of Centaurus A C.C. Teddy Cheung (NRC/NRL) Lukasz Stawarz (ISAS/JAXA) Yasushi Fukazawa (Hiroshima)
On the nature of High Frequency Peaker radio sources Monica Orienti Girdwood, 22/05/2007 Monica Orienti – Extragalactic Jets (INAF – IRA, Bologna) Daniele.
Jet Interactions with the Hot Atmospheres of Clusters & Galaxies B.R. McNamara University of Waterloo Girdwood, Alaska May 23, 2007 L. Birzan, P.E.J. Nulsen,
VHE  -ray Emission From Nearby FR I Radio Galaxies M. Ostrowski 1 & L. Stawarz 1,2 1 Astronomical Observatory, Jagiellonian University 2 Landessternwarte.
Abstract We present multiwavelength imaging and broad-band spectroscopy of the relativistic jets in the two nearby radio galaxies 3C 371 and PKS ,
Recent Progress in Understanding X-ray Emission From Early-type Galaxies: The Hot Gas Component Jimmy A. Irwin University of Michigan X-rays From Nearby.
Collaborators: Murgia M. (IRA-INAF-CA), Feretti L. (IRA-INAF- BO), Govoni F. (OAC-INAF-CA), Giovannini G. (University of Bologna), Ferrari C. (Observatoire.
Observations of SNR G at 6cm JianWen Xu, Li Xiao, XiaoHui Sun, Chen Wang, Wolfgang Reich, JinLin Han Partner Group of MPIfR at NAOC.
A smoothed hardness map of the hotspots of Cygnus A (right) reveals previously unknown structure around the hotspots in the form of outer and inner arcs.
Towards a new synergy between X and  -ray astronomies Patrizia Caraveo In collab. with A. DeLuca, M.Marelli, G.Bignami.
Xray observations of high redshift radio galaxies
Suzaku discovery of a transient ultra-luminous X-ray source,
The X-ray Morphology and Spectra of Galactic Disks
X-Ray Measurement of Particle and Field Energy Distributions in Lobes of Radio Galaxies Naoki Isobe Detection of Inverse Compton.
Cornelia C. Lang University of Iowa collaborators:
Presentation transcript:

2005/9/28 X-ray Universe The electron and magnetic field energies in the east lobe of the radio galaxy Fornax A, measured with XMM-Newton. Naoki Isobe, Kazuo Makishima (RIKEN) Makoto Tashiro, Koichi Ito (Saitama-U), Naoko Iyomoto (GSFC), Hidehiro Kaneda (JAXA)

2005/9/28X-ray Universe IC X-ray emission from lobes of radio galaxies 3C 452 (Isobe et al. 2001) Color : Chandra (0.3-7 keV) Contour : VLA radio image Energy densities in radio lobes The IC X-rays is discovered from Fornax A with ASCA (Kaneda et al. 1995) and ROSAT (Fiegelson et al. 1995) Croston et al Isobe et al Brunetti et al., Comastri et al., Grandi et al. u e > u m CMB-boosted Magnetic energy density u m [erg cm -3 ] Electron energy density u e [erg cm -3 ]

2005/9/28X-ray Universe The radio galaxy Fornax A Distance : 18.6 Mpc Distance : 18.6 Mpc (Madore et al. 1999) (Madore et al. 1999) The 4 th brightest radio source in the southern hemisphere. The 4 th brightest radio source in the southern hemisphere. S 2.7 GHz = 98 ± 1.5Jy S 2.7 GHz = 98 ± 1.5Jy (Ekers 1969) (Ekers 1969) Double-lobe morphology, without any bright hot spots and jets. Double-lobe morphology, without any bright hot spots and jets. The dormant nucleus The dormant nucleus (Iyomoto et al Kim & Fabianno 1999, Tashiro et al. in this session) (Iyomoto et al Kim & Fabianno 1999, Tashiro et al. in this session) u e = u m ? u e = u m ? (Kaneda et al. 1995, Tashiro et al. 2001) (Kaneda et al. 1995, Tashiro et al. 2001) 20 arcmin 108 kpc 1.5 GHz VLA image (Fomalont et al. 1989) ASCA image

2005/9/28X-ray Universe XMM-Newton image of Fornax A (1) A 60 ksec XMM-Newton observation of the east lobe. A 60 ksec XMM-Newton observation of the east lobe. ⇒ GTI : 30 ksec for MOS. ⇒ GTI : 30 ksec for MOS. 0 ksec for PN 0 ksec for PN (due to BGD contamination) (due to BGD contamination) All the east lobe is within the FoV. All the east lobe is within the FoV. NGC 1316 locates at the FoV edge. NGC 1316 locates at the FoV edge. 59 sources are detected. 59 sources are detected. Integrated flux of detected sources is smaller than the ASCA flux. Integrated flux of detected sources is smaller than the ASCA flux. MOS image in 0.3 – 10 keV 10 arcmin 54.1 kpc ⇒ diffuse emission NGC 1316

2005/9/28X-ray Universe XMM-Newton image of Fornax A (2) The diffuse X-ray emission from the east lobe is confirmed. The diffuse X-ray emission from the east lobe is confirmed. Diffuse X-ray emission is also detected, between the lobe and host galaxy. Diffuse X-ray emission is also detected, between the lobe and host galaxy. MOS image in 0.3 – 10 keV  BGD-subtracted (Read & Ponman 2003)  Source-removed,  Exposure corrected  1 arcmin smoothing

2005/9/28X-ray Universe X-ray Spectrum outside of the lobe Thermal emission Thermal emission kT = keV kT = keV (A = 0.3 A solar fix) (A = 0.3 A solar fix) Consistent with the ASCA result Consistent with the ASCA result kT = keV kT = keV A = A = (Iyomoto el al. 1998). (Iyomoto el al. 1998). r = 2.5 arcmin (13.5 kpc)

2005/9/28X-ray Universe X-ray spectrum of the east lobe Power-low model. Power-low model. S 1keV = nJy S 1keV = nJy  X =  X = Consistent with the ASCA result. Consistent with the ASCA result. S 1keV = 110±50 nJy S 1keV = 110±50 nJy  X = 0.7±0.9  X = 0.7±0.9 (Kaneda et al. 1995) (Kaneda et al. 1995) Slightly harder than the synchrotron radio spectrum. Slightly harder than the synchrotron radio spectrum.  R = 0.9 ± 0.2  R = 0.9 ± 0.2 (Kaneda et al. 1995) (Kaneda et al. 1995) r = 10 arcmin (54.1 kpc)

2005/9/28X-ray Universe Spectral Energy Distribution 29.9 MHz 100 MHz : Finlay & Jones (1973) 408 MHz : Robertoson (1973) 843 MHz : Jones & McAdam (1992) 1.4 GHz : Ekers et al (1983) 2.7 GHz : Ekers (1969) 5.0 GHz : Kuhr et al. (1981) Total East Lobe West Lobe(ASCA) X-ray : East lobe S 1keV = nJy  X = Radio : total S 1.4GHz = 44 Jy  R = 0.68 ± 0.05  R =  X IC X-rays from synchrotron electrons

2005/9/28X-ray Universe Energetics in the lobes (1) Radius S 1.4GHz  R  1keV S 1keV 10 arcmin (54.1 kpc) 44 Jy 0.68 ± nJy East Lobe (XMM-Newton) West Lobe (ASCA, Tashiro et al ) 7.3 arcmin (Integration region) 50 Jy 0.68 ± ± ±10 nJy B eq B IC u m u e u e /u m ±  G erg cm ± Electron spectrum ∝  2  +1 ∝ ue um∝ ue um ∝ u e u CMB (Harris and Grindlay 1979)

2005/9/28X-ray Universe Energetics in the lobes (2) Fornax A East lobe

2005/9/28X-ray Universe Summary XMM-Newton confirmation of the IC X-ray emission from the east lobe of Fornax A. XMM-Newton confirmation of the IC X-ray emission from the east lobe of Fornax A. S 1keV = nJy,  X = S 1keV = nJy,  X = Evaluation of electron and magnetic energy density. Evaluation of electron and magnetic energy density. u e = (3.0 ± 0.3) x erg cm -3 u e = (3.0 ± 0.3) x erg cm -3 u m = x erg cm -3 u m = x erg cm -3 Moderate electron dominance, even though the nucleus is dormant. Moderate electron dominance, even though the nucleus is dormant. u e /u m ~ 5 u e /u m ~ 5 The u e will evolve to the equipartition value in ~ Gyr (IC + Synchrotron cooling time scale ~ 2 x 10 8 yr x (    -2. The u e will evolve to the equipartition value in ~ Gyr (IC + Synchrotron cooling time scale ~ 2 x 10 8 yr x (    -2. The IC X-ray and synchrotron radio distribution seems different The IC X-ray and synchrotron radio distribution seems different