Serendipitous discovery of a dying Giant Radio Galaxy associated with NGC 1534, using the Murchison Widefield Array
Abstract
Recent observations with the Murchison Widefield Array at 185~MHz have serendipitously unveiled a heretofore unknown giant and relatively nearby (z = 0.0178) radio galaxy associated with NGC\,1534. The diffuse emission presented here is the first indication that NGC\,1534 is one of a rare class of objects (along with NGC\,5128 and NGC\,612) in which a galaxy with a prominent dust lane hosts radio emission on scales of 700\,kpc. We present details of the radio emission along with a detailed comparison with other radio galaxies with disks. NGC1534 is the lowest surface brightness radio galaxy known with an estimated scaled 1.4-GHz surface brightness of just 0.2\,mJy\,arcmin-2. The radio lobes have one of the steepest spectral indices yet observed: α=-2.10.1, and the core to lobe luminosity ratio is <0.1\%. We estimate the space density of this low brightness (dying) phase of radio galaxy evolution as 7×10-7\,Mpc-3 and argue that normal AGN cannot spend more than 6\% of their lifetime in this phase if they all go through the same cycle.
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