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A&A 391, 127-138 (2002)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20020780
Modelling the spectral evolution of classical double radio sources
K. Manolakou and J. G. KirkMax-Planck-Institut für Kernphysik, Saupfercheckweg 1, 69117 Heidelberg, Germany
e-mail: Dina.Manolakou@mpi-hd.mpg.de
(Received 1 March 2002 / Accepted 17 May 2002 )
Abstract
The spectral evolution of powerful double radio galaxies (FR II's) is
thought to be determined
by the acceleration of electrons at the termination shock of the jet,
their transport through
the bright head region into the lobes
and the production of the radio emission
by synchrotron radiation
in the lobes.
Models presented to date incorporate some of these processes
in prescribing the
electron distribution which enters the lobes. We have extended these models to
include a
description of electron acceleration at the relativistic termination shock and a
selection of
transport models for the head region. These are coupled to the evolution of the
electron spectrum in the
lobes under the influence of losses due to adiabatic expansion, by inverse
Compton scattering on the
cosmic background radiation and by synchrotron radiation.
The evolutionary tracks predicted by this model are compared to observation
using the power/source-size
(P-D ) diagram. We find that the simplest scenario, in
which accelerated
particles suffer
adiabatic losses in the head region which become more severe as the
source expands
produces P-D -tracks
which conflict with
observation, because the power is predicted to decline too steeply with
increasing size. Agreement with
observation can be found by assuming that adiabatic losses are compensated
during transport between the
termination shock and the lobe by a re-acceleration process
distributed throughout the head region.
Key words: acceleration of particles -- plasmas -- shock waves -- galaxies: active -- galaxies: high redshift -- galaxies: jets
Offprint request: J. G. Kirk, John.Kirk@mpi-hd.mpg.de
© ESO 2002
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