Very Large Array observations of the mini-halo and AGN feedback in the Phoenix cluster

© R. Timmerman et al. 2021. Context. The relaxed cool-core Phoenix cluster (SPT-CL J2344-4243) features an extremely strong cooling flow, as well as a mini halo. Strong star formation in the brightest cluster galaxy indicates that active galactic nucleus (AGN) feedback has been unable to inhibit thi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Timmerman, R, van Weeren, RJ, McDonald, M, Ignesti, A, McNamara, BR, Hlavacek-Larrondo, J, Röttgering, HJA
Other Authors: MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/142182
_version_ 1811074678248177664
author Timmerman, R
van Weeren, RJ
McDonald, M
Ignesti, A
McNamara, BR
Hlavacek-Larrondo, J
Röttgering, HJA
author2 MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research
author_facet MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research
Timmerman, R
van Weeren, RJ
McDonald, M
Ignesti, A
McNamara, BR
Hlavacek-Larrondo, J
Röttgering, HJA
author_sort Timmerman, R
collection MIT
description © R. Timmerman et al. 2021. Context. The relaxed cool-core Phoenix cluster (SPT-CL J2344-4243) features an extremely strong cooling flow, as well as a mini halo. Strong star formation in the brightest cluster galaxy indicates that active galactic nucleus (AGN) feedback has been unable to inhibit this cooling flow. Aims. We aim to study the strong cooling flow in the Phoenix cluster by determining the radio properties of the AGN and its lobes. In addition, we used spatially resolved radio observations to investigate the origin of the mini halo. Methods. We present new multifrequency Very Large Array 1-12 GHz observations of the Phoenix cluster, which resolve the AGN and its lobes in all four frequency bands as well as the mini-halo in the L and S bands. Results. Using our L-band observations, we measure the total flux density of the radio lobes at 1.5 GHz to be 7.6  ±  0.8 mJy, and the flux density of the mini halo to be 8.5  ±  0.9 mJy. Using high-resolution images in the L and X bands, we produced the first spectral index maps of the lobes from the AGN and find the spectral indices of the northern and southern lobes to be -1.35  ±  0.07 and -1.30  ±  0.12, respectively. Similarly, using L- and S-band data, we mapped the spectral index of the mini halo, and obtain an integrated spectral index of α  =  -0.95  ±  0.10. Conclusions. We find that the mini halo is most likely formed by turbulent re-acceleration powered by sloshing in the cool core due to a recent merger. In addition, we find that the feedback in the Phoenix cluster is consistent with the picture that stronger cooling flows are to be expected for massive clusters such as this one, as these may feature an underweight supermassive black hole due to their merging history. Strong time variability of the AGN on Myr timescales may help explain the disconnection between the radio and the X-ray properties of the system. Finally, a small amount of jet precession of the AGN likely contributes to the relatively low intracluster medium re-heating efficiency of the mechanical feedback.
first_indexed 2024-09-23T09:53:37Z
format Article
id mit-1721.1/142182
institution Massachusetts Institute of Technology
language English
last_indexed 2024-09-23T09:53:37Z
publishDate 2022
publisher EDP Sciences
record_format dspace
spelling mit-1721.1/1421822023-04-14T18:52:43Z Very Large Array observations of the mini-halo and AGN feedback in the Phoenix cluster Timmerman, R van Weeren, RJ McDonald, M Ignesti, A McNamara, BR Hlavacek-Larrondo, J Röttgering, HJA MIT Kavli Institute for Astrophysics and Space Research © R. Timmerman et al. 2021. Context. The relaxed cool-core Phoenix cluster (SPT-CL J2344-4243) features an extremely strong cooling flow, as well as a mini halo. Strong star formation in the brightest cluster galaxy indicates that active galactic nucleus (AGN) feedback has been unable to inhibit this cooling flow. Aims. We aim to study the strong cooling flow in the Phoenix cluster by determining the radio properties of the AGN and its lobes. In addition, we used spatially resolved radio observations to investigate the origin of the mini halo. Methods. We present new multifrequency Very Large Array 1-12 GHz observations of the Phoenix cluster, which resolve the AGN and its lobes in all four frequency bands as well as the mini-halo in the L and S bands. Results. Using our L-band observations, we measure the total flux density of the radio lobes at 1.5 GHz to be 7.6  ±  0.8 mJy, and the flux density of the mini halo to be 8.5  ±  0.9 mJy. Using high-resolution images in the L and X bands, we produced the first spectral index maps of the lobes from the AGN and find the spectral indices of the northern and southern lobes to be -1.35  ±  0.07 and -1.30  ±  0.12, respectively. Similarly, using L- and S-band data, we mapped the spectral index of the mini halo, and obtain an integrated spectral index of α  =  -0.95  ±  0.10. Conclusions. We find that the mini halo is most likely formed by turbulent re-acceleration powered by sloshing in the cool core due to a recent merger. In addition, we find that the feedback in the Phoenix cluster is consistent with the picture that stronger cooling flows are to be expected for massive clusters such as this one, as these may feature an underweight supermassive black hole due to their merging history. Strong time variability of the AGN on Myr timescales may help explain the disconnection between the radio and the X-ray properties of the system. Finally, a small amount of jet precession of the AGN likely contributes to the relatively low intracluster medium re-heating efficiency of the mechanical feedback. 2022-04-28T18:20:29Z 2022-04-28T18:20:29Z 2021 2022-04-28T18:14:02Z Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/142182 Timmerman, R, van Weeren, RJ, McDonald, M, Ignesti, A, McNamara, BR et al. 2021. "Very Large Array observations of the mini-halo and AGN feedback in the Phoenix cluster." Astronomy and Astrophysics, 646. en 10.1051/0004-6361/202039075 Astronomy and Astrophysics Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 application/pdf EDP Sciences EDP Sciences
spellingShingle Timmerman, R
van Weeren, RJ
McDonald, M
Ignesti, A
McNamara, BR
Hlavacek-Larrondo, J
Röttgering, HJA
Very Large Array observations of the mini-halo and AGN feedback in the Phoenix cluster
title Very Large Array observations of the mini-halo and AGN feedback in the Phoenix cluster
title_full Very Large Array observations of the mini-halo and AGN feedback in the Phoenix cluster
title_fullStr Very Large Array observations of the mini-halo and AGN feedback in the Phoenix cluster
title_full_unstemmed Very Large Array observations of the mini-halo and AGN feedback in the Phoenix cluster
title_short Very Large Array observations of the mini-halo and AGN feedback in the Phoenix cluster
title_sort very large array observations of the mini halo and agn feedback in the phoenix cluster
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/142182
work_keys_str_mv AT timmermanr verylargearrayobservationsoftheminihaloandagnfeedbackinthephoenixcluster
AT vanweerenrj verylargearrayobservationsoftheminihaloandagnfeedbackinthephoenixcluster
AT mcdonaldm verylargearrayobservationsoftheminihaloandagnfeedbackinthephoenixcluster
AT ignestia verylargearrayobservationsoftheminihaloandagnfeedbackinthephoenixcluster
AT mcnamarabr verylargearrayobservationsoftheminihaloandagnfeedbackinthephoenixcluster
AT hlavaceklarrondoj verylargearrayobservationsoftheminihaloandagnfeedbackinthephoenixcluster
AT rottgeringhja verylargearrayobservationsoftheminihaloandagnfeedbackinthephoenixcluster