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Is Abell 3667 an offset merger?

Authors :
Omiya, Y.
Nakazawa, K.
Tamura, T.
Akamatsu, H.
Matsushita, K.
Okabe, N.
Sato, K.
Fujita, Y.
Gu, L.
Simionescu, A.
Ichinohe, Y.
Riseley, C. J.
Akahori, T.
Ito, D.
Sakai, K.
Kurahara, K.
Omiya, Y.
Nakazawa, K.
Tamura, T.
Akamatsu, H.
Matsushita, K.
Okabe, N.
Sato, K.
Fujita, Y.
Gu, L.
Simionescu, A.
Ichinohe, Y.
Riseley, C. J.
Akahori, T.
Ito, D.
Sakai, K.
Kurahara, K.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Abell 3667 is a near-by (z=0.056) merging cluster with the most prominent cold front and a pair of two bright radio relics. Assuming a face-to-face merger scenario, the origin of the cold front is often considered to be a remnant core of the cluster stripped of its surrounding ICM. Sarazin et al. (2016) proposed an offset merger scenario in which the sub-cluster cores rotate after the first core-crossing. To distinguish between these scenarios, we revisited the ICM distribution and measured the line-of-sight bulk ICM velocity using a calibration technique proposed by Sanders et al. (2020). In the unsharp masked image, we identified several ICM features, some of which we detected for the first time. There is an enhancement of the X-ray surface brightness extending from the 1st BCG to the cold front, which is named the "BCG-E tail". The notable feature is the "RG1 vortex", which is a clockwise vortex-like enhancement with a radius of about 250 kpc connecting the 1st BCG to the radio galaxy (RG1). It is particularly enhanced near the north of the 1st BCG, which is named the "BCG-N tail". The thermodynamic map shows that the ICM in the RG1 vortex has a relatively high abundance of 0.5-0.6 solar compared to the surrounding regions. The ICM of the BCG-E tail also has high abundance, and low pseudo-entropy, and can be interpreted as the remnant of the ICM of the cluster core. Including its arc-like shape, the RG1 vortex supports the idea that the ICM around the cluster center is rotating, which is natural in an offset merger scenario. The results of the line-of-sight bulk ICM velocity measurement show that the ICM around the BCG-N tail is redshifted with a velocity difference of 940$\pm$440 km s$^{-1}$ compared to the optical redshift of the 1st BCG. Other symptoms of diversity in the line-of-sight velocity of the ICM were also obtained and discussed in the context of the offset merger.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1430708730
Document Type :
Electronic Resource