ArXiv TLDR

CosmoDRAGoN III: Shaping the Afterlife -- How Progenitors and Environments Sculpt Radio Galaxy Remnants

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2605.10156

Georgia S. C. Stewart, Stanislav S. Shabala, Patrick M. Yates-Jones, Ross J. Turner, Raffaella Morganti + 4 more

astro-ph.GAastro-ph.HE

TLDR

This paper uses 3D simulations to show how progenitor power and environment sculpt radio galaxy remnants, affecting their morphology, spectral evolution, and detectability.

Key contributions

  • 3D hydrodynamic simulations reveal how progenitor power and environment sculpt radio galaxy remnants.
  • Group remnants are systematically dimmer and more amorphous than cluster remnants, indicating observational bias.
  • Young remnants show spectral indices overlapping active sources, evolving to significant curvature and ultra-steep indices.

Why it matters

This work provides crucial insights into the complex spectral and morphological evolution of radio galaxy remnants. It serves as a vital reference for current and future low-frequency observations, helping to overcome observational biases and improve remnant identification.

Original Abstract

Identifying remnant radio-loud active galactic nuclei (AGNs) is challenging due to their diverse morphological and spectral characteristics. Using three-dimensional hydrodynamic simulations of 15 radio galaxies, we investigate how the spectral evolution of remnants depends on progenitor power, active lifetime, environment, and underlying dynamics. The simulations span low-density group and high-density cluster environments re-gridded from smooth-particle-hydrodynamic cosmological simulations. The resulting remnants exhibit a wide range of morphologies, from amorphous structures to double-lobed forms. We find that jet power correlates with the spectral slope. As the remnant lobes evolve, we find surface brightness depends strongly on environment: group remnants are systematically dimmer and more amorphous than cluster remnants, highlighting a potential observational bias against these low-surface-brightness sources. In our models, we estimate that the peak surface brightness of a low-redshift, 50 Myr-old remnant from a low-power progenitor in a 10^{13} M_sun group environment should be routinely detectable at the 3σ level with LOFAR, although 20-30% of the emission would remain undetectable within a reasonable integration time. We find young remnants exhibit low-frequency (150-1400 MHz) spectral indices that overlap with active sources, and follow a consistent and established spectral-evolution sequence: significant curvature (α_{1400}^{6000} - α_{150}^{1400} > 0.5) develops before an ultra-steep low-frequency index (α_{150}^{1400} > 1.2). The results presented in this work are intended as a reference point for current and upcoming low-frequency studies of radio remnants.

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