ArXiv TLDR

A Compact Radio Ring with a Diffuse Envelope in LOFAR: Odd Radio Circle or Distinct Phenomenon?

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2605.05174

M. Polletta, A. L. Coil, B. L. Frye, H. Dole

astro-ph.GAastro-ph.CO

TLDR

A new compact radio ring, J1248+4826, with a diffuse envelope is discovered, challenging current ORC models and extending the population.

Key contributions

  • Discovered J1248+4826, a compact ORC-like radio source with a diffuse envelope in LOFAR data.
  • Features a ~30 kpc ring within a ~200 kpc diffuse emission, making it the most compact ORC candidate.
  • Its host galaxy is on the ring edge, challenging typical ORC central host associations.
  • Suggests fossil plasma re-acceleration by intragroup shocks, possibly from galaxy mergers.

Why it matters

This paper introduces a unique ORC candidate, J1248+4826, which challenges existing formation models for Odd Radio Circles. It suggests that compact ORCs and diffuse envelopes might be more common, highlighting the diversity of diffuse radio sources and the role of group dynamics.

Original Abstract

We report the discovery and investigate the nature of J1248+4826, an ORC-like source identified in the LOFAR Survey. We analyze its radio morphology, size, luminosity, and spectral properties, and study its environment and optical counterparts using multiwavelength data. We compare this source with other diffuse radio sources from the literature. J1248+4826 exhibits a well-defined ring of radius ~9" embedded in diffuse emission extending to ~1'. Assuming an association with a galaxy group at z=0.2, this corresponds to a physical radius of ~30 kpc, making it the most compact ORC candidate identified so far, while its total extent (~200 kpc), radio luminosity, and spectral index are consistent with the known ORC population. The putative host is the most massive group galaxy but it is located on the ring edge rather than in the center, unlike most known ORCs. We find no evidence for ongoing AGN activity, and both the morphology and spectral properties disfavor an origin as extended lobe from an active or dying radio galaxy, as well as fossil plasma re-accelerated by a virial shock. A more plausible scenario is that the source traces fossil plasma re-accelerated by shocks in the intragroup medium, possibly driven by galaxy interactions or mergers, although the compact ring size and high luminosity remain challenging to reproduce. If confirmed as an ORC, J1248+4826 would extend the population toward smaller physical scales and imply that compact systems may be underrepresented in current samples. The diffuse envelope further indicates that faint extended emission may be more common than previously recognized. This source highlights the diversity of diffuse radio sources and the likely role of group dynamics in shaping them, underscoring the need for larger samples, targeted follow-up observations and sophisticated simulations to discriminate between different formation scenarios.

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