We use deep Chandra X-ray Observatory observations to examine the coronae of
the two brightest cluster galaxies in the Coma cluster of galaxies, NGC 4874
and NGC 4889. We find that NGC 4889 hosts a central depression in X-ray surface
brightness consistent with a cavity or pair of cavities of radius 0.6 kpc. If
the central cavity is associated with an AGN outburst and contains relativistic
material, its enthalpy should be around 5x10^55 erg. The implied heating power
of this cavity would be around an order of magnitude larger than the energy
lost by X-ray emission. It would be the smallest and youngest known cavity in a
brightest cluster galaxy and the lack of over pressuring implies heating is
still gentle. In contrast, NGC 4874 does not show any evidence for cavities,
although it hosts a well-known wide-angle-tail radio source which is visible
outside the region occupied by the X-ray corona. These two galaxies show that
AGN feedback can behave in varied ways in the same cluster environment.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, accepted by MNRA