Mini radio lobes in AGNs core illumination and their hadronic gamma-ray afterlight
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Recent radio observations reveal the existence of mini radio lobes in active galaxies with their scales of $\sim 10 {\rm pc}$. The lobes are expected to be filled with shock accelerated electrons and protons. In this work, we examine the photon spectra from the mini lobes, properly taking the hadronic processes into account. We find that the resultant broadband spectra contain the two distinct hadronic bumps in $\gamma$-ray bands, i.e., the proton synchrotron bump at $\sim$ MeV and the synchrotron bump at $\sim$ GeV due to the secondary electrons/positrons produced via photo-pion cascade. Especially when the duration of particle injection is shorter than the lobe age, radio-dark $\gamma$-ray lobes are predicted. The existence of the $\gamma$-ray lobes could be testable with the future TeV-$\gamma$ telescope {\it CTA}.
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