Abstract
ABSTRACTWe present low frequency, GMRT observations at 240, 610, and 1300 MHz of IC 711, a narrow angle tail (NAT) radio galaxy. The total angular extent of the radio emission, ∼22 arcmin, corresponds to a projected linear size of ∼900 kpc, making it the longest among the known head-tail radio galaxies. The objectives of the GMRT observations were to investigate the radio morphology, especially of the long tail structure, at low frequencies. The radio structure, especially initial ∼10 arcmin of tail being a long straight feature, does not seem to be consistent with a simple circular motion around the cluster centre, as previously suggested in the literature. Two sharp bends after the straight section of the tail cast doubt on the prevailing idea in the literature that the long narrow tails represent trails left behind by the fast moving parent optical galaxy with respect to the cluster medium, as the optical galaxy could not have undergone such sharp bends in its path, under any conceivable gravitational influence of some individual galaxy or of the overall cluster gravitational potential. In fact, the tail does not seem to have been influenced by the gravitational field of any of the cluster-member galaxies. The radio spectrum of the head, coinciding with the optical galaxy, is flat ($\alpha \stackrel{\lt }{_{\sim }}0.4$ for S∝ ν−α), but steadily steepens along the radio tail, with the end part of the tail showing the steepest spectrum ($\alpha \, {\sim}$ 4–5) ever seen in any diffuse radio emission region.
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