4C+55.16 is located in the center of a cool core of galaxies.[10][11] The galaxy is considered an
X-ray bright (LX (cluster) ~ 1045erg/s), radio powerful (LR = 8 Jy/beam at 1.4GHz), and showing signs of
interaction with its surrounding
intracluster medium (ICM).[12] The hot ICM (T = 107 − 108 K) emits a strong X-ray emission through
thermal bremsstrahlung, which cools this medium down and causes it to sink down the
gravitational well in the form of a cooling flow.[13] As the cooling flow
accretes into 4C+55.16, the AGN in the center is feed, triggering its
supermassive black hole to produce large quantities of energy in
radiation form and strong jetted outflows.[13]
As cooling flow is injected, it competes the feedback cycle preventing a runaway cooling event. The jetted outflows then expand into large lobes against its internal pressure with the ICM.[14] This process can be observed through the radio regime of
electromagnetic spectrum, showing
magnetized plasma emitted by the black hole or by X-ray radiation, which the lobes appear as cavities in the ICM like Cygnus A[15] and
NGC 1275.[16] It may also be possible that the galaxy is optically disturbed by its companion, with a separation of 81 kpc.[17]
From a study, combining deep
Chandra images (100 ks) and 1.4
GHzVery Large Array observations, researchers were able to find evidence of multiple outbursts originating from its central core, providing enough energy to offset the cooling process of the ICM (Pbubbles = 6.7 × 1044 erg/s).[12]
Another study shows 4C+55.16 has an unusual intracluster
iron distribution. From the 10 ks Chandra exposure, a study from Iwasawa et. al (2001),[18] found that there was a large increase of
metallicity which was at a
radius of around 10
arcsec, going from half-solar to twice solar.[12] This might be suggested by the plume-like structure which is located south-west side of the cluster that shows strong Fe L
emission features.[12]
Further studies showed that the X-ray
spectrum of the plume is characterized by its metal abundance pattern of
Type Ia supernovae, large ratios of Fe to α elements, with its iron metallicity highest at 7.9+24 −5.0 solar (90 per cent error). How the plume formed isn't clear.[18]
Not to mention, 4C+55.16 has two X-ray cavities found on opposite sides of the radio core, which was discovered by Hlavacek-Larrondo et al. (2011).[12] Such of these meant, is a key tracer of
mechanical heating caused by its active galactic nucleus (AGN).[19] The power generated by the AGN in 4C+ 55.16 has remained unchanged for over the half of the age of the
universe (>Gyr at z ~ 0.8). Moreover, the detected X-ray cavities have powers of (0.8 - 5) x 10 erg and a radii of ~ 17 kpc.[19]
There is a surface brightness edge which is interpreted as
cold fronts that are located south of the galaxy's center.[20] A pair of
radio lobes is also revealed in the southeast-northwest direction, coinciding with the X-ray cavities. On the VLBA scale, there is a resolved extended emission, well fitted in DIFMAP by its two components consisting of a core and a jet.[20] Such this interpretation is consistent with the images published by the
European VLBI Network at 5 GHz, published by Whyborn et al. (1985).[10] The northwest cavity is aligned with its radio jet, while the other is misaligned, hence being important to note why the projection effects is important in the system where Ψ∥LOS ~ 60°.[20]
The
gas pressure at the center of a
cooling flow for 4C+55.16, is P=nT≈107 cm−3 K.[21] Through a cloud of length 10l1 pc at pressure 107P7 cm−3 K and temperature 104T4 K, it leads to a free-free
absorption optical depth τff≈0.6P27ν9−2T47/2l1 at a
frequency 109ν9 Hz.[8] It is plausible it might be due to free-free absorption in the
Hα emitting gas that is close to the nucleus, but must be decreased to ensure a radio knot ~100 pc north-west of the nucleus[22] is not observed.
^Ceccotti, E.; Offringa, A. R.; Koopmans, L. V. E.; Timmerman, R.; Brackenhoff, S. A.; Gehlot, B. K.; Mertens, F. G.; Munshi, S.; Pandey, V. N.; van Weeren, R. J.; Yatawatta, S.; Zaroubi, S. (2023-09-01). "A novel radio imaging method for physical spectral index modelling". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 525 (3): 3946–3962.
arXiv:2308.07306.
doi:
10.1093/mnras/stad2465.
ISSN0035-8711.