1,362 research outputs found
A shock front in the merging galaxy cluster Abell 754: X-ray and radio observations
We present new Chandra X-ray and Giant Meterwave Radio Telescope (GMRT) radio
observations of the nearby merging galaxy cluster Abell 754. Our X-ray data
confirm the presence of a shock front by obtaining the first direct measurement
of a gas temperature jump across the X-ray brightness edge previously seen in
the imaging data. A754 is only the fourth galaxy cluster with confirmed merger
shock fronts, and it has the weakest shock of those, with a Mach number
M=1.57+0.16-0.12. In our new GMRT observation at 330 MHz, we find that the
previously-known centrally located radio halo extends eastward to the position
of the shock. The X-ray shock front also coincides with the position of a radio
relic previously observed at 74 MHz. The radio spectrum of the post-shock
region, using our radio data and the earlier results at 74 MHz and 1.4 GHz, is
very steep. We argue that acceleration of electrons at the shock front directly
from thermal to ultrarelativistic energies is problematic due to energy
arguments, while reacceleration of preexisting relativistic electrons is more
plausible.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, "emulateapj" format. Submitted to Ap
Strong Magnetization Measured in the Cool Cores of Galaxy Clusters
Tangential discontinuities, seen as X-ray edges known as cold fronts (CFs),
are ubiquitous in cool-core galaxy clusters. We analyze all 17 deprojected CF
thermal profiles found in the literature, including three new CFs we
tentatively identify (in clusters A2204 and 2A0335). We discover small but
significant thermal pressure drops below all nonmerger CFs, and argue that they
arise from strong magnetic fields below and parallel to the discontinuity,
carrying 10%-20% of the pressure. Such magnetization can stabilize the CFs, and
explain the CF-radio minihalo connection.Comment: PRL accepted, additional control tests adde
Dynamics and Magnetization in Galaxy Cluster Cores Traced by X-ray Cold Fronts
Cold fronts (CFs) - density and temperature plasma discontinuities - are
ubiquitous in cool cores of galaxy clusters, where they appear as X-ray
brightness edges in the intracluster medium, nearly concentric with the cluster
center. We analyze the thermodynamic profiles deprojected across core CFs found
in the literature. While the pressure appears continuous across these CFs, we
find that all of them require significant centripetal acceleration beneath the
front. This is naturally explained by a tangential, nearly sonic bulk flow just
below the CF, and a tangential shear flow involving a fair fraction of the
plasma beneath the front. Such shear should generate near-equipartition
magnetic fields on scales ~<50 pc from the front, and could magnetize the
entire core. Such fields would explain the apparent stability of cool-core CFs
and the recently reported CF-radio minihalo association.Comment: Revised version to appear in Astrophys.J.Let
Chemical Gradients in Galaxy Clusters and the Multiple Ways of Making a Cold Front
Cold fronts were originally interpreted as being the result of
subsonic/transonic motions of head-on merging substructures. This merger core
remnant model is theoretically justified and hold relatively well for clusters
that have clear signs of merging, such as 1E0657-56, but they do not work well
for the increasing number of cold fronts found in clusters that do not show
clear merging signs, such as A496. Here we report the results of a deeper
observation of that cluster that allowed us to produce high quality maps of the
gas parameters and to compare more closely the observations with the
predictions given by different models for cold front formation. We found for
the first time a ``cold arm'' characteristic of a flyby of a massive DM halo
near the core of the cluster. The cold arm is accompanied by an enhanced SN II
Fe mass fraction, inconsistent with the merger core remnant scenario.Comment: 3 pages, 1 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of "Heating vs.
Cooling in Galaxies and Clusters of Galaxies", August 2006, Garching
(Germany
Cold fronts in cool core clusters
Cold fronts have been detected both in merging and in cool core clusters,
where little or no sign of a merging event is present. A systematic search of
sharp surface brightness discontinuities performed on a sample of 62 galaxy
clusters observed with XMM-Newton shows that cold fronts are a common feature
in galaxy clusters. Indeed most (if not all) of the nearby clusters (z < 0.04)
host a cold front. Understanding the origin and the nature of a such frequent
phenomenon is clearly important. To gain insight on the nature of cold fronts
in cool core clusters we have undertaken a systematic study of all contact
discontinuities detected in our sample, measuring surface brightness,
temperature and when possible abundance profiles across the fronts. We measure
the Mach numbers for the cold fronts finding values which range from 0.2 to
0.9; we also detect a discontinuities in the metal profile of some clusters.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, for proceedings of "Heating vs. Cooling in
Galaxies and Clusters of Galaxies," eds H. Boehringer, P. Schuecker, G. W.
Pratt & A. Finoguenov, in Springer-Verlag series "ESO Astrophysics Symposia.
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