4.7 Article

Two clusters of galaxies with radio-quiet cooling cores

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 630, Issue 1, Pages L13-L16

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1086/462416

Keywords

cooling flows; galaxies : clusters : general; galaxies : clusters : individual (A1650, A2244)

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Radio lobes inflated by active galactic nuclei (AGNs) at the centers of clusters are promising candidates for halting condensation in clusters with short central cooling times because they are common in such clusters. In order to test the AGN- heating hypothesis, we obtained Chandra observations of two clusters with short central cooling times yet no evidence for AGN activity: Abell 1650 and Abell 2244. The cores of these clusters indeed appear systematically different from cores with more prominent radio emission. They do not have significant central temperature gradients, and their central entropy levels are markedly higher than in clusters with stronger radio emission, corresponding to central cooling times similar to 1 Gyr. Also, there is no evidence for fossil X- ray cavities produced by an earlier episode of AGN heating. We suggest that either (1) the central gas has not yet cooled to the point at which feedback is necessary to prevent it from condensing, possibly because it is conductively stabilized, or (2) the gas experienced a major heating event >= 1 Gyr in the past and has not required feedback since then. The fact that these clusters with no evident feedback have higher central entropy and therefore longer central cooling times than clusters with obvious AGN feedback strongly suggests that AGNs supply the feedback necessary to suppress condensation in clusters with short central cooling times.

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