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The jet/wind outflow in Centaurus A: a local laboratory for AGN feedback

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arxiv 1711.01751 v1 pith:JW2JIE5J submitted 2017-11-06 astro-ph.GA

The jet/wind outflow in Centaurus A: a local laboratory for AGN feedback

classification astro-ph.GA
keywords radiocentaurusgalaxyemissionfeedbackimagesnorthernobservations
verification ladder T0 review T1 audit T2 compute T3 formal T4 reserved
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We present new radio and optical images of the nearest radio galaxy Centaurus A and its host galaxy NGC 5128. We focus our investigation on the northern transition region, where energy is transported from the ~5 kpc (~5 arcmin) scales of the Northern Inner Lobe (NIL) to the ~30 kpc (~30 arcmin) scales of the Northern Middle Lobe (NML). Our Murchison Widefield Array observations at 154 MHz and our Parkes radio telescope observations at 2.3 GHz show diffuse radio emission connecting the NIL to the NML, in agreement with previous Australia Telescope Compact Array observations at 1.4 GHz. Comparison of these radio data with our widefield optical emission line images show the relationship between the NML radio emission and the ionised filaments that extend north from the NIL, and reveal a new ionised filament to the east, possibly associated with a galactic wind. Our deep optical images show clear evidence for a bipolar outflow from the central galaxy extending to intermediate scales, despite the non-detection of a southern radio counterpart to the NML. Thus, our observational overview of Centaurus A reveals a number of features proposed to be associated with AGN feedback mechanisms, often cited as likely to have significant effects in galaxy evolution models. As one of the closest galaxies to us, Centaurus A therefore provides a unique laboratory to examine feedback mechanisms in detail.

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Cited by 1 Pith paper

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  1. AGN Feeding & Feedback Over the Galactic Scales

    astro-ph.GA 2026-06 unverdicted novelty 2.0

    SKAO will trace synchrotron jets, thermal emission, and low-column-density HI gas in nearby AGN to characterize duty cycles and multi-phase feeding/feedback linked to star formation.