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Stormy weather in 3C 196.1: nuclear outbursts and merger events shape the environment of the hybrid radio galaxy 3C 196.1

Authors :
Ralph Kraft
Elisabetta Liuzzo
Francesco Massaro
Grant R. Tremblay
Stefi A. Baum
William R. Forman
Alessandro Paggi
Federica Ricci
Belinda Jane Wilkes
Christopher P. O'Dea
Lorenzo Lovisari
Ricci F
Lovisari L
Kraft R. P.
Massaro F.
Paggi A.
Liuzzo E.
Tremblay G.
Forman W. R.
Baum S.
O'Dea C.
Wilkes B.
Ricci, F.
Lovisari, L.
Kraft, R. P.
Massaro, F.
Paggi, A.
Liuzzo, E.
Tremblay, G.
Forman, W. R.
Baum, S.
O’Dea, C.
Wilkes, B.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

We present a multi-wavelength analysis based on archival radio, optical and X-ray data of the complex radio source 3C 196.1, whose host is the brightest cluster galaxy of a $z=0.198$ cluster. HST data show H$\alpha$+[N II] emission aligned with the jet 8.4 GHz radio emission. An H$\alpha$+[N II] filament coincides with the brightest X-ray emission, the northern hotspot. Analysis of the X-ray and radio images reveals cavities located at galactic- and cluster- scales. The galactic-scale cavity is almost devoid of 8.4 GHz radio emission and the south-western H$\alpha$+[N II] emission is bounded (in projection) by this cavity. The outer cavity is co-spatial with the peak of 147 MHz radio emission, and hence we interpret this depression in X-ray surface brightness as being caused by a buoyantly rising bubble originating from an AGN outburst $\sim$280 Myrs ago. A \textit{Chandra} snapshot observation allowed us to constrain the physical parameters of the cluster, which has a cool core with a low central temperature $\sim$2.8 keV, low central entropy index $\sim$13 keV cm$^2$ and a short cooling time of $\sim$500 Myr, which is $<br />Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures, ApJ accepted

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....cf0a163ee3b1119aaabc599e93fbb905