Abstract:
Active galactic nucleus (AGN) feedback during galaxy merger has been the most favoured model to explain black hole–galaxy
co-evolution. However, how the AGN-driven jet/wind/radiation is coupled with the gas of the merging galaxies, which leads
to positive feedback, momentarily enhanced star formation, and subsequently negative feedback, a decline in star formation,
is poorly understood. Only a few cases are known where the jet and companion galaxy interaction leads to minor off-axis
distortions in the jets and enhanced star formation in the gas-rich minor companions. Here, we briefly report one extraordinary
case, RAD12, discovered by RAD@home citizen science collaboratory, where for the first time a radio jet–driven bubble
(∼ 137 kpc) is showing a symmetric reflection after hitting the incoming galaxy which is not a gas-rich minor but a gas-poor
early-type galaxy in a major merger. Surprisingly, neither positive feedback nor any radio lobe on the counter jet side, if any,
is detected. It is puzzling if RAD12 is a genuine one-sided jet or a case of radio lobe trapped, compressed and re-accelerated
by shocks during the merger. This is the first imaging study of RAD12 presenting follow-up with the Giant Metrewave Radio
Telescope, archival MeerKAT radio data and Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope optical data.