1,514 research outputs found
Redshift and velocity dispersion of the cluster of galaxies around NGC 326
Redshifts of several galaxies thought to be associated with NGC 326 are
determined. The results confirm the presence of a cluster and find a mean
redshift of z = 0.0477 +/- 0.0007 and a line-of-sight velocity dispersion
sigma_{z} = 599 (+230, -110) km/s. The velocity dispersion and previously
measured X-ray gas temperature of kT ~ 1.9 keV are consistent with the cluster
sigma_{z}/kT relation, and NGC 326 is seen to be a slowly-moving member of the
cluster.Comment: 3 pages, to appear in MNRA
Buoyancy-driven inflow to a relic cold core: the gas belt in radio galaxy 3C 386
We report measurements from an XMM-Newton observation of the low-excitation
radio galaxy 3C 386. The study focusses on an X-ray-emitting gas belt, which
lies between and orthogonal to the radio lobes of 3C 386 and has a mean
temperature of keV, cooler than the extended group atmosphere.
The gas in the belt shows temperature structure with material closer to the
surrounding medium being hotter than gas closer to the host galaxy. We suggest
that this gas belt involves a `buoyancy-driven inflow' of part of the group-gas
atmosphere where the buoyant rise of the radio lobes through the ambient medium
has directed an inflow towards the relic cold core of the group.
Inverse-Compton emission from the radio lobes is detected at a level consistent
with a slight suppression of the magnetic field below the equipartition value.Comment: 11 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in MNRA
Another X-ray-Discovered Poor Cluster of Galaxies Associated with CL 0016+16
We report optical spectroscopic observations of RX J0018.8+1602, a ROSAT X-ray source proposed to be an intermediate redshift cluster of galaxies. Our observations confirm the identification of RX J0018.8+1602 and provide measurements of its mean radial velocity (z=0.5406 +/- 0.0006) and velocity dispersion (sigma_p = 200 [+110, -80] km/s). This is the second poor cluster that has been found to be a companion to CL 0016+16 (z=0.5455), the other one being RX J0018.3+1618 (z=0.5506). The 0.2-2 keV band source-frame X-ray luminosity summed over both companion clusters is 5E44 ergs/s, which is a significant fraction, ~23%, of the X-ray luminosity of the main cluster. The companions are located at angular distances of 10 arcmin to 25 arcmin (minimum physical scales of 5 Mpc to 12 Mpc) from CL 0016+16 and we propose that they represent a new large-scale component of the X-ray emission from clusters of galaxies. Similar low X-ray luminosity poor clusters surrounding nearby Abell clusters can explain the excess power observed in the angular cross-correlation function between Abell clusters and the X-ray background on inferred physical scales of 14--20 Mpc (Soltan et al. 1996)
Diffraction-limited Subaru imaging of M82: sharp mid-infrared view of the starburst core
We present new imaging at 12.81 and 11.7 microns of the central ~40"x30"
(~0.7x0.5 kpc) of the starburst galaxy M82. The observations were carried out
with the COMICS mid-infrared (mid-IR) imager on the 8.2m Subaru telescope, and
are diffraction-limited at an angular resolution of <0".4. The images show
extensive diffuse structures, including a 7"-long linear chimney-like feature
and another resembling the edges of a ruptured bubble. This is the clearest
view to date of the base of the kpc-scale dusty wind known in this galaxy.
These structures do not extrapolate to a single central point, implying
multiple ejection sites for the dust. In general, the distribution of dust
probed in the mid-IR anticorrelates with the locations of massive star clusters
that appear in the near-infrared. The 10-21 micron mid-IR emission,
spatially-integrated over the field of view, may be represented by hot dust
with temperature of ~160 K. Most discrete sources are found to have extended
morphologies. Several radio HII regions are identified for the first time in
the mid-IR. The only potential radio supernova remnant to have a mid-IR
counterpart is a source which has previously also been suggested to be a weak
active galactic nucleus. This source has an X-ray counterpart in Chandra data
which appears prominently above 3 keV and is best described as a hot (~2.6 keV)
absorbed thermal plasma with a 6.7 keV Fe K emission line, in addition to a
weaker and cooler thermal component. The mid-IR detection is consistent with
the presence of strong [NeII]12.81um line emission. The broad-band source
properties are complex, but the X-ray spectra do not support the active
galactic nucleus hypothesis. We discuss possible interpretations regarding the
nature of this source.Comment: Accepted for publication in PASJ Subaru special issue. High
resolution version available temporarily at
http://www.astro.isas.jaxa.jp/~pgandhi/pgandhi_m82.pd
Determining Tangential Peculiar Velocities of Clusters of Galaxies using Gravitational Lensing
We propose two new methods for measuring tangential peculiar velocities of
rich clusters of galaxies. Our first method is based on weak gravitational
lensing and takes advantage of the differing images of background galaxies
caused by moving and stationary gravitational potentials. Our second method is
based on measuring relative frequency shifts between multiple images of a
single strongly lensed background galaxy. We illustrate this method using the
example of galaxy cluster CL 0024+1654.Comment: LateX, 4 pages, 2 figures, accepted for publication in Part 1 of The
Astrophysical Journa
A Merger Scenario for the Dynamics of Abell 665
We present new redshift measurements for 55 galaxies in the vicinity of the
rich galaxy cluster Abell 665. When combined with results from the literature,
we have good velocity measurements for a sample of 77 confirmed cluster members
from which we derive the cluster's redshift z=0.1829 +/- 0.0005 and
line-of-sight velocity dispersion of 1390 +/- 120 km/s. Our analysis of the
kinematical and spatial data for the subset of galaxies located within the
central 750 kpc reveals only subtle evidence for substructure and
non-Gaussianity in the velocity distribution. We find that the brightest
cluster member is not moving significantly relative to the other galaxies near
the center of the cluster. On the other hand, our deep ROSAT high resolution
image of A665 shows strong evidence for isophotal twisting and centroid
variation, thereby confirming previous suggestions of significant substructure
in the hot X-ray--emitting intracluster gas. In light of this evident
substructure, we have compared the optical velocity data with N-body
simulations of head-on cluster mergers. We find that a merger of two similar
mass subclusters (mass ratios of 1:1 or 1:2) seen close to the time of
core-crossing produces velocity distributions that are consistent with that
observed.Comment: 30 pages and 7 figures. Accepted by the Astrophysical Journal Full
resoultion figures 1 and 3 available in postscript at
http://www.physics.rutgers.edu/~percy/A665paper.htm
A spectroscopic study of NGC 6251 and its companion galaxies
Measurements of the velocities of galaxies thought to be associated with the
giant radio galaxy NGC 6251 confirm the presence of a poor cluster with a
systemic redshift of z= 0.0244 +/- 0.0004 and a line-of-sight velocity
dispersion of sigma_{z}= 283 (+109, -52) km/s. This suggests a cluster
atmosphere temperature of T = 0.7 (+0.6, -0.2) keV, which is not enough to
confine the radio jet by gas pressure. The core of NGC 6251 shows strong
emission lines of [O III] and H alpha + [N II], but there is no evidence for
line emission from the jet (detected in optical continuum by Keel (1988)).Comment: 7 pages, 2 figures, to be published in MNRA
Preliminary Sunyaev Zel'dovich Observations of Galaxy Clusters with OCRA-p
We present 30 GHz Sunyaev Zel'dovich (SZ) observations of a sample of four
galaxy clusters with a prototype of the One Centimetre Receiver Array (OCRA-p)
which is mounted on the Torun 32-m telescope. The clusters (Cl0016+16,
MS0451.6-0305, MS1054.4-0321 and Abell 2218) are popular SZ targets and serve
as commissioning observations. All four are detected with clear significance
(4-6 sigma) and values for the central temperature decrements are in good
agreement with measurements reported in the literature. We believe that
systematic effects are successfully suppressed by our observing strategy. The
relatively short integration times required to obtain these results demonstrate
the power of OCRA-p and its successors for future SZ studies.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures. Accepted by MNRAS, online earl
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