Revisiting the EC/CMB model for extragalactic large scale jets
Date Issued
2017
Author(s)
Abstract
One of the most outstanding results of the Chandra X-ray Observatory was the discovery that AGN jets are bright X-ray emitters on very large scales, up to hundreds of kpc. Of these, the powerful and beamed jets of flat-spectrum radio quasars are particularly interesting, as the X-ray emission cannot be explained by an extrapolation of the lower frequency synchrotron spectrum. Instead, the most common model invokes inverse Compton scattering of photons of the cosmic microwave background (EC/CMB) as the mechanism responsible for the high-energy emission. The EC/CMB model has recently come under criticism, particularly because it should predict a significant steady flux in the MeV-GeV band which has not been detected by the Fermi/LAT telescope for two of the best studied jets (PKS 0637-752 and 3C273). In this work, we revisit some aspects of the EC/CMB model and show that electron cooling plays an important part in shaping the spectrum. This can solve the overproduction of γ-rays by suppressing the high-energy end of the emitting particle population. Furthermore, we show that cooling in the EC/CMB model predicts a new class of extended jets that are bright in X-rays but silent in the radio and optical bands. These jets are more likely to lie at intermediate redshifts and would have been missed in all previous X-ray surveys due to selection effects.
Volume
466
Issue
4
Start page
4299
Issn Identifier
0035-8711
Ads BibCode
2017MNRAS.466.4299L
Rights
open.access
File(s)![Thumbnail Image]()
Loading...
Name
stw3316.pdf
Description
Pdf editoriale
Size
702.48 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
ce137bd8d7fb7829c562bb1ebb87374f
