Back to Search Start Over

Physics of cosmic plasmas from high angular resolution X-ray imaging of galaxy clusters

Authors :
Markevitch, Maxim
Bulbul, Esra
Churazov, Eugene
Giacintucci, Simona
Kraft, Ralph
Kunz, Matthew
Nagai, Daisuke
Roediger, Elke
Ruszkowski, Mateusz
Schekochihin, Alex
van Weeren, Reinout
Vikhlinin, Alexey
Walker, Stephen A.
Wang, Qian H. S.
Werner, Norbert
Wik, Daniel
Zhuravleva, Irina
ZuHone, John
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Galaxy clusters are massive dark matter-dominated systems filled with X-ray emitting, optically thin plasma. Their large size and relative simplicity (at least as astrophysical objects go) make them a unique laboratory to measure some of the interesting plasma properties that are inaccessible by other means but fundamentally important for understanding and modeling many astrophysical phenomena -- from solar flares to black hole accretion to galaxy formation and the emergence of the cosmological Large Scale Structure. While every cluster astrophysicist is eagerly anticipating the direct gas velocity measurements from the forthcoming microcalorimeters onboard XRISM, Athena and future missions such as Lynx, a number of those plasma properties can best be probed by high-resolution X-ray imaging of galaxy clusters. Chandra has obtained some trailblazing results, but only grazed the surface of such studies. In this white paper, we discuss why we need arcsecond-resolution, high collecting area, low relative background X-ray imagers (with modest spectral resolution), such as the proposed AXIS and the imaging detector of Lynx.<br />Comment: Science white paper submitted for Astro2020 Decadal survey. 9 pages, 4 figures

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1903.06356
Document Type :
Working Paper