Cygnus A

Abstract

We report Chandra imaging-spectroscopy and RXTE spectroscopy of the nearby, powerful radio galaxy Cygnus A. Various aspects of the results are discussed, including the X-ray properties of the nucleus, the radio hot spots, the cluster of galaxies, the prolate cavity in the ICM inflated by the radio jets and ``bands'' of thermal gas which encircle the cavity in its equatorial plane. The hard X-ray emission of the nucleus extends to 100 keV and originates from an unresolved source absorbed by a large column density (N H 2 × 1023 cm-2) of gas. The soft (< 2 keV) nuclear emission exhibits a bi-polar structure which extends 2 kpc from the nucleus and is strongly correlated with both optical continuum and emission-line morphologies. It is suggested that this nebulosity is photoionized by the nucleus and that the extended X-rays are electron-scattered nuclear radiation. All four radio hot spots are detected in X-rays, with the emission resulting from synchrotron self-Compton radiation in an approximately equipartition field. The temperature of the X-ray emitting intracluster gas drops from 8 keV more than 100 kpc from the center to 5 keV some 80 kpc from the center, with the coolest gas immediately adjacent to the radio galaxy. There is a metallicity gradient in the X-ray emitting gas, with the highest metallicities ( solar) found close to the center, decreasing to 0.3 solar in the outer parts. (Abstract truncated).

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