Extended X-ray emission in PKS 1718-649

© ESO 2018. PKS 1718-649 is one of the closest and most comprehensively studied candidates of a young active galactic nucleus (AGN) that is still embedded in its optical host galaxy. The compact radio structure, with a maximal extent of a few parsecs, makes it a member of the group of compact symmet...

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Main Authors: Beuchert, T., Rodríguez-Ardila, A., Moss, V., Schulz, R., Kadler, M., Wilms, J., Angioni, R., Callingham, J., Gräfe, C., Krauß, F., Kreikenbohm, A., Langejahn, M., Leiter, K., Maccagni, F., Müller, C., Ojha, R., Ros, E., Tingay, Steven
Format: Journal Article
Published: EDP Sciences 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/68686
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author Beuchert, T.
Rodríguez-Ardila, A.
Moss, V.
Schulz, R.
Kadler, M.
Wilms, J.
Angioni, R.
Callingham, J.
Gräfe, C.
Krauß, F.
Kreikenbohm, A.
Langejahn, M.
Leiter, K.
Maccagni, F.
Müller, C.
Ojha, R.
Ros, E.
Tingay, Steven
author_facet Beuchert, T.
Rodríguez-Ardila, A.
Moss, V.
Schulz, R.
Kadler, M.
Wilms, J.
Angioni, R.
Callingham, J.
Gräfe, C.
Krauß, F.
Kreikenbohm, A.
Langejahn, M.
Leiter, K.
Maccagni, F.
Müller, C.
Ojha, R.
Ros, E.
Tingay, Steven
author_sort Beuchert, T.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © ESO 2018. PKS 1718-649 is one of the closest and most comprehensively studied candidates of a young active galactic nucleus (AGN) that is still embedded in its optical host galaxy. The compact radio structure, with a maximal extent of a few parsecs, makes it a member of the group of compact symmetric objects (CSO). Its environment imposes a turnover of the radio synchrotron spectrum towards lower frequencies, also classifying PKS 1718-649 as gigahertz-peaked radio spectrum (GPS) source. Its close proximity has allowed the first detection of extended X-ray emission in a GPS/CSO source with Chandra that is for the most part unrelated to nuclear feedback. However, not much is known about the nature of this emission. By co-adding all archival Chandra data and complementing these datasets with the large effective area of XMM-Newton, we are able to study the detailed physics of the environment of PKS 1718-649. Not only can we confirm that the bulk of the kiloparsec-scale environment emits in the soft X-rays, but we also identify the emitting gas to form a hot, collisionally ionized medium. While the feedback of the central AGN still seems to be constrained to the inner few parsecs, we argue that supernovae are capable of producing the observed large-scale X-ray emission at a rate inferred from its estimated star formation rate.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2018
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-686862018-09-20T03:52:42Z Extended X-ray emission in PKS 1718-649 Beuchert, T. Rodríguez-Ardila, A. Moss, V. Schulz, R. Kadler, M. Wilms, J. Angioni, R. Callingham, J. Gräfe, C. Krauß, F. Kreikenbohm, A. Langejahn, M. Leiter, K. Maccagni, F. Müller, C. Ojha, R. Ros, E. Tingay, Steven © ESO 2018. PKS 1718-649 is one of the closest and most comprehensively studied candidates of a young active galactic nucleus (AGN) that is still embedded in its optical host galaxy. The compact radio structure, with a maximal extent of a few parsecs, makes it a member of the group of compact symmetric objects (CSO). Its environment imposes a turnover of the radio synchrotron spectrum towards lower frequencies, also classifying PKS 1718-649 as gigahertz-peaked radio spectrum (GPS) source. Its close proximity has allowed the first detection of extended X-ray emission in a GPS/CSO source with Chandra that is for the most part unrelated to nuclear feedback. However, not much is known about the nature of this emission. By co-adding all archival Chandra data and complementing these datasets with the large effective area of XMM-Newton, we are able to study the detailed physics of the environment of PKS 1718-649. Not only can we confirm that the bulk of the kiloparsec-scale environment emits in the soft X-rays, but we also identify the emitting gas to form a hot, collisionally ionized medium. While the feedback of the central AGN still seems to be constrained to the inner few parsecs, we argue that supernovae are capable of producing the observed large-scale X-ray emission at a rate inferred from its estimated star formation rate. 2018 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/68686 10.1051/0004-6361/201833064 EDP Sciences fulltext
spellingShingle Beuchert, T.
Rodríguez-Ardila, A.
Moss, V.
Schulz, R.
Kadler, M.
Wilms, J.
Angioni, R.
Callingham, J.
Gräfe, C.
Krauß, F.
Kreikenbohm, A.
Langejahn, M.
Leiter, K.
Maccagni, F.
Müller, C.
Ojha, R.
Ros, E.
Tingay, Steven
Extended X-ray emission in PKS 1718-649
title Extended X-ray emission in PKS 1718-649
title_full Extended X-ray emission in PKS 1718-649
title_fullStr Extended X-ray emission in PKS 1718-649
title_full_unstemmed Extended X-ray emission in PKS 1718-649
title_short Extended X-ray emission in PKS 1718-649
title_sort extended x-ray emission in pks 1718-649
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/68686