Simulating radio emission from flickering AGN jets: travelling shocks and hotspot brightening

Published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 2026

Abstract

We investigate the impact of flickering variability in jet power on the luminosity and morphology of radio galaxies. We use a Lagrangian particle method together with relativistic hydrodynamics simulations using the pluto code to track the evolution of electron spectra through particle acceleration at shocks and cooling processes. We introduce an adapted version of this method which improves tracking of adiabatic cooling in regimes where low density jet material mixes with high density from the ambient medium in the lobes. We find that rapid increases in jet power can lead to large increases in hotspot luminosity due to the interaction of a travelling shock structure with the pre-existing shock structure at the jet head. We show that in some cases it may be possible to identify a bright region of emission corresponding to a shock travelling along the jet axis. We find that the time-averaged radiative efficiency of variable jets is similar to their steady counterparts, but find significant departures from this on an instantaneous basis. We suggest that, together with environmental effects and differences in the average powers of jets, variable jet powers may have a significant impact on how we understand the diversity of radio jets seen in observations and have significant implications for interpretations of jet powers, energy budgets, and luminosity-linear size diagrams.

Evolution of morphology in variable jets

The below image shows the evolution of simulated emission from one constant and three variable jets over the course of 2 Myr. The constant jet shows a similar morphology at all times, whereas the variable jets have hotspots which vary greatly in luminosity over periods of fractions of a Myr.

Simulated radio images of variable jets over time

Recommended citation: Elley, Emma L., Matthews, James H., Mukherjee, Dipanjan & Vaidya, Bhargav (2009). "Simulating radio emission from flickering AGN jets: travelling shocks and hotspot brightening." Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 546(2).
Link to Paper