TY - JOUR
T1 - Filaments in the southern giant lobe of Centaurus A
T2 - Constraints on nature and origin from modelling and GMRT observations
AU - Wykes, Sarka
AU - Intema, Huib T.
AU - Hardcastle, Martin J.
AU - Achterberg, Abraham
AU - Jones, Thomas W.
AU - Jerjen, Helmut
AU - Orrú, Emanuela
AU - Lazarian, Alex
AU - Shimwell, Timothy W.
AU - Wise, Michael W.
AU - Kronberg, Philipp P.
PY - 2014/8
Y1 - 2014/8
N2 - We present results from imaging of the radio filaments in the southern giant lobe of CentaurusA using data from Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope observations at 325 and 235 MHz, and outcomes from filament modelling. The observations reveal a rich filamentary structure, largely matching the morphology at 1.4 GHz. We find no clear connection of the filaments to the jet. We seek to constrain the nature and origin of the vertex and vortex filaments associated with the lobe and their role in high-energy particle acceleration. We deduce that these filaments are at most mildly overpressuredwith respect to the global lobe plasma showing no evidence of largescale efficient Fermi I-type particle acceleration, and persist for ~2-3 Myr. We demonstrate that the dwarf galaxy KK 196 (AM 1318-444) cannot account for the features, and that surface plasma instabilities, the internal sausage mode and radiative instabilities are highly unlikely. An internal tearing instability and the kink mode are allowed within the observational and growth time constraints and could develop in parallel on different physical scales. We interpret the origin of the vertex and vortex filaments in terms of weak shocks from transonic magnetohydrodynamical turbulence or from a moderately recent jet activity of the parent AGN, or an interplay of both.
AB - We present results from imaging of the radio filaments in the southern giant lobe of CentaurusA using data from Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope observations at 325 and 235 MHz, and outcomes from filament modelling. The observations reveal a rich filamentary structure, largely matching the morphology at 1.4 GHz. We find no clear connection of the filaments to the jet. We seek to constrain the nature and origin of the vertex and vortex filaments associated with the lobe and their role in high-energy particle acceleration. We deduce that these filaments are at most mildly overpressuredwith respect to the global lobe plasma showing no evidence of largescale efficient Fermi I-type particle acceleration, and persist for ~2-3 Myr. We demonstrate that the dwarf galaxy KK 196 (AM 1318-444) cannot account for the features, and that surface plasma instabilities, the internal sausage mode and radiative instabilities are highly unlikely. An internal tearing instability and the kink mode are allowed within the observational and growth time constraints and could develop in parallel on different physical scales. We interpret the origin of the vertex and vortex filaments in terms of weak shocks from transonic magnetohydrodynamical turbulence or from a moderately recent jet activity of the parent AGN, or an interplay of both.
KW - Galaxies: individual (Centaurus A)
KW - Galaxies: jets
KW - Instabilities
KW - Radio continuum: galaxies
KW - Techniques: image processing
KW - Turbulence
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84904556136&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1093/mnras/stu1033
DO - 10.1093/mnras/stu1033
M3 - Article
SN - 0035-8711
VL - 442
SP - 2867
EP - 2882
JO - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
JF - Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
IS - 4
ER -