26 research outputs found
Development of Hydrodynamic Instability in the Intergalactic Medium of the Merging Cluster of Galaxies A3667
A3667, a spectacular merger cluster, was observed by Chandra twice. In this
paper we review the main results of the analysis of these observations. In
particular we show evidence for the presence in the cluster of a 300 kpc
Kelvin-Helmholtz hydrodynamic instability. We discuss the development of such
instability and the structure of the intracluster magnetic filed in light of a
self-consistent cluster dynamical model.Comment: 7 pages, color figures. To appear in Proc. "New Visions of the X-ray
Universe in the XMM-Newton and Chandra Era", ESTEC, The Netherlands (Nov
2001), Eds. F.Janse
XMM-Newton observation of the cluster ZW 1305.4+2941 in the field SA 57
We report the details of an XMM observation of the cluster of galaxies ZW
1305.4+2941 at the intermediate redshift of z=0.241, increasing the small
number of interesting X-ray constraints on properties of ~3 keV systems above
z=0.1. Based on the 45 ks XMM observation, we find that within a radius of 228
kpc the cluster has an unabsorbed X-ray flux of 2.07 +/- 0.06 x 10^{-13}
erg/cm^2/s, a temperature of kT = 3.17 +/-0.19 keV, in good agreement with the
previous ROSAT determination, and an abundance of 0.93 (+0.24,-0.29} solar.
Within r_500 = 723 +/- 6 kpc the rest-frame bolometric X-ray luminosity is L_X
(r_500)= 1.25 +/- 0.16 x 10^{44} erg/s. The cluster obeys the scaling relations
for L_X, T and the velocity dispersion derived at intermediate redshift for kT
< 4 keV, for which we provide new fits for all literature objects. The mass
derived from an isothermal NFW model fit is, M_vir = 2.77 +/- 0.21 x 10^{14}
solar masses, with a concentration parameter, c = 7.9 +/- 0.5.Comment: 9 pages, 7 colour figures, accepted for publication in ApJ. Corrected
typo on the fraction of blue galaxie
Chandra Observation of a 300 kpc Hydrodynamic Instability in the Intergalactic Medium of the Merging Cluster of Galaxies A3667
We present results from the combination of two Chandra pointings of the
central region of the cluster of galaxies A3667. From the data analysis of the
first pointing Vikhlinin et al. reported the discovery of a prominent cold
front which is interpreted as the boundary of a cool gas cloud moving through
the hotter ambient gas. Vikhlinin et al. discussed the role of the magnetic
fields in maintaining the apparent dynamical stability of the cold front over a
wide sector at the forward edge of the moving cloud and suppressing transport
processes across the front. In this Letter, we identify two new features in the
X-ray image of A3667: i) a 300 kpc arc-like filamentary X-ray excess extending
from the cold gas cloud border into the hotter ambient gas; ii) a similar
arc-like filamentary X-ray depression that develops inside the gas cloud. The
temperature map suggests that the temperature of the filamentary excess is
consistent with that inside the gas cloud while the temperature of the
depression is consistent with that of the ambient gas. We suggest that the
observed features represent the first evidence for the development of a large
scale hydrodynamic instability in the cluster atmosphere resulting from a major
merger. This result confirms previous claims for the presence of a moving cold
gas cloud into the hotter ambient gas. Moreover it shows that, although the gas
mixing is suppressed at the leading edge of the subcluster due to its magnetic
structure, strong turbulent mixing occurs at larger angles to the direction of
motion. We show that this mixing process may favor the deposition of a
nonnegligible quantity of thermal energy right in the cluster center, affecting
the development of the central cooling flow.Comment: Replaced to match version accepted for publication in ApJL; some
changes on text. 4 pages, 3 color figures and 2 BW figures, emulateapj
Nonthermal hard X-ray excess in the Coma cluster: resolving the discrepancy between the results of different PDS data analyses
The detection of a nonthermal excess in the Coma cluster spectrum by two
BeppoSAX observations analyzed with the XAS package (Fusco-Femiano et al.) has
been disavowed by an analysis (Rossetti & Molendi) performed with a different
software package (SAXDAS) for the extraction of the spectrum. To resolve this
discrepancy we reanalyze the PDS data considering the same software used by
Rossetti & Molendi. A correct selection of the data and the exclusion of
contaminating sources in the background determination show that also the SAXDAS
analysis reports a nonthermal excess with respect to the thermal emission at
about the same confidence level of that obtained with the XAS package
(~4.8sigma). Besides, we report the lack of the systematic errors investigated
by Rossetti & Molendi and Nevalainen et al. taking into account the whole
sample of the PDS observations off the Galactic plane, as already shown in our
data analysis of Abell 2256 (Fusco-Femiano, Landi & Orlandini). All this
eliminates any ambiguity and confirms the presence of a hard tail in the
spectrum of the Coma cluster.Comment: 12 pages, 2 figures. Accepted for publication in ApJ Letter
Non-thermal pressure in the outskirts of Abell 2142
Clumping and turbulence are expected to affect the matter accreted on to the outskirts of galaxy clusters. To determine their impact on the thermodynamic properties of Abell 2142, we perform an analysis of the X-ray temperature data from XMM-Newton via our SuperModel, a state-of-the-art tool for investigating the astrophysics of the intracluster medium already tested on many individual clusters (since Cavaliere, Lapi & Fusco-Femiano 2009). Using the gas density profile corrected for clumpiness derived by Tchernin et al. (2016), we find evidence for the presence of a non-thermal pressure component required to sustain gravity in the cluster outskirts of Abell 2142, that amounts to about 30 per cent of the total pressure at the virial radius. The presence of the non-thermal component implies the gas fraction to be consistent with the universal value at the virial radius and the electron thermal pressure profile to be in good agreement with that inferred from the SZ data. Our results indicate that the presence of gas clumping and of a non-thermal pressure component are both necessary to recover the observed physical properties in the cluster outskirts. Moreover, we stress that an alternative method often exploited in the literature (included Abell 2142) to determine the temperature profile kBT = Pe/nebasing on a combination of the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) pressure Peand of the X-ray electron density nedoes not allow us to highlight the presence of non-thermal pressure support in the cluster outskirts