Deep Chandra and XMM-Newton Observations of NGC 4472 R. P. Kraft, S. W. Randall, W. R. Forman, P. E. J. Nulsen, C. Jones, A. Bogdan, M. J. Hardcastle,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cooling and Feedback in Early-Type Galaxies (and Groups) C. Jones, W. Forman, E. Churazov, P. Nulsen, R. Kraft X-ray emission from early-type galaxies.
Advertisements

Fluorescent Processes Research School of Astronomy & Astrophysics Fluorescent Processes Feeding The Beast: Infall, Mergers or Starbursts? Mike Dopita (ANU)
Metal distribution in sloshing galaxy clusters: the case of A496 Simona Ghizzardi Sabrina De Grandi Silvano Molendi.
Front X-ray Studies of Galaxies and Galaxy Systems Jesper Rasmussen Ph.D. Defence Astronomical Observatory, Univ. of Copenhagen 17th March 2004.
Radio Mode Feedback in Giant Elliptical Galaxies Paul Nulsen (CfA), Christine Jones (CfA), William Forman (CfA), Eugene Churazov (MPA), Laurence David.
X-Ray Measurements of the Mass of M87 D. Fabricant, M. Lecar, and P. Gorenstein Astrophysical Journal, 241: , 15 October 1980 Image:
An XMM-Newton Study of the Centaurus A Northern Middle Radio Lobe R. P. Kraft, W. R. Forman, M. J. Hardcastle, M. Birkinshaw, J. H. Croston, C. Jones,
Clusters & Super Clusters Large Scale Structure Chapter 22.
The Sharpest Spatial View of a Black Hole Accretion Flow from the Chandra X-ray Visionary Project Observation of the NGC 3115 Bondi Region Jimmy Irwin.
Chandra's Clear View of the Structure of Clusters Craig Sarazin University of Virginia Bullet Cluster (Markevitch et al. 2004) Hydra A Cluster (Kirkpatrick.
GONE WITH THE WIND Galaxy Transformation in Abell 2125.
The Radio/X-ray Interaction in Abell 2029 Tracy Clarke (Univ. of Virginia) Collaborators: Craig Sarazin (UVa), Elizabeth Blanton (UVa)
24-28 October 2005 Elena Belsole University of Bristol Distant clusters of Galaxies Ringberg Workshop X-ray constraints on cluster-scale emission around.
Luigina Feretti Istituto di Radioastronomia CNR Bologna, Italy Radio observations of cluster mergers X-Ray and Radio Connections, Santa Fe, NM February.
Galaxies Cluster formation : Numerical Simulations and XMM Observations JL Sauvageot *, Elena Belsole *,R.Teyssier *, Herve Bourdin + Service d'Astrophysique.
Radio halos and relics in galaxy clusters. NGC315: giant (~ 1.3 Mpc) radio galaxy with odd radio lobe (Mack 1996; Mack et al. 1998). precessing jets (Bridle.
COLD FRONTS IN GROUPS AND CLUSTERS AND THEIR DYNAMICAL STATE IN THE OPTICAL FABIO GASTALDELLO INAF-IASF MILAN & UC IRVINE M. MESSA, L. DI GESU S. GHIZZARDI,
Searching for the large-scale hot gaseous Galactic halo --Observations confront theories Yangsen Yao in collaboration with Michael A. Nowak Q. Daniel Wang.
HOT TIMES FOR COOLING FLOWS Mateusz Ruszkowski. Cooling flow cluster Non-cooling flow cluster gas radiates X-rays & loses pressure support against gravity.
Prospects and Problems of Using Galaxy Clusters for Precision Cosmology Jack Burns Center for Astrophysics and Space Astronomy University of Colorado,
Radio galaxies in the Chandra Era, Boston, July 2008 Shock heating in the group atmosphere of the radio galaxy B A Nazirah Jetha 1, Martin Hardcastle.
I. Balestra, P.T., S. Ettori, P. Rosati, S. Borgani, V. Mainieri, M. Viola, C. Norman Galaxies and Structures through Cosmic Times - Venice, March 2006.
Centaurus A Kraft, Hardcastle, Croston, Worrall, Birkinshaw, Nulsen, Forman, Murray, Goodger, Sivakoff,Evans, Sarazin, Harris, Gilfanov, Jones X-ray composite.
Extended Radio Sources in Clusters of Galaxies Elizabeth Blanton University of Virginia.
Low frequency radio observations of galaxy groups With acknowledgements to: R. Athreya, P. Mazzotta, T. Clarke, W. Forman, C. Jones, T. Ponman S.Giacintucci.
M87 interaction between a SMBH and gas rich atmosphere
Chandra Observations of Radio Sources in Clusters: Impact on the ICM and Tracers of High-z Systems Elizabeth Blanton University of Virginia Collaborators:
An X-ray Study of the Bright Supernova Remnant G with XMM-Newton SNRs and PWNe in the Chandra Era Boston, MA – July 8 th, 2009 Daniel Castro,
Hot Gas in Elliptical and BCG Galaxies Craig Sarazin University of Virginia M86 (Randall et al. 2008) Abell 2052 (Blanton et al. 2011)
SEARCHING FOR COOLING FLOWS… Silvia Caffi IASF/CNR Sez. Milano.
Studying Galaxy Clusters with Astro-H Silvano Molendi IASF-Milano/INAF.
Studying AGN feedback in nearby X-ray groups and clusters Electra Panagoulia Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge, UK With: Andy Fabian Jeremy Sanders Julie.
How to start an AGN: the role of host galaxy environment Rachel Gilmour (ESO Chile & IfA, Edinburgh) Philip Best (Edinburgh), Omar Almaini & Meghan Gray.
Galaxy Evolution in the Virgo Cluster Bernd Vollmer CDS, Observatoire de Strasbourg, France In collaboration with: P. Amram, C. Balkowski, R. Beck, A.
Cosmology and extragalactic astronomy Mat Page Mullard Space Science Lab, UCL 14. Galaxy counting and the evolving Universe.
The Environments of Galaxies: from Kiloparsecs to Megaparsecs August 2004 Cool Cores in Galaxy Groups Ewan O’Sullivan Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics.
Suzaku, XMM-Newton and Chandra Observations of the Central Region of M 31 Hiromitsu Takahashi (Hiroshima University, Japan) M. Kokubun, K. Makishima, A.
The Warm-hot Gaseous Halo of the Milky Way Smita Mathur The Ohio State University With Anjali Gupta, Yair Krongold, Fabrizio Nicastro, M. Galeazzi.
Preliminary Results from a Deep (600 ks) Chandra Observation of Centaurus A R. Kraft 1, M. Hardcastle 2, A. Jordan 3, G. Sivakoff 4, D. Worrall 5, M. Birkinshaw.
Hot gas in galaxy pairs Olga Melnyk. It is known that the dark matter is concentrated in individual haloes of galaxies and is located in the volume of.
Galaxy Wakes – Theory & Observations Irini Sakelliou University of Birmingham D.M. Acreman, T.J. Ponman, I.R. Stevens University of Birmingham M.R. Merrifield.
The interaction between galaxies and their environment Trevor Ponman University of Birmingham Jesper Rasmussen Carnegie Observatories.
GH2005 Gas Dynamics in Clusters III Craig Sarazin Dept. of Astronomy University of Virginia A85 Chandra (X-ray) Cluster Merger Simulation.
This composite X-ray (blue)/radio (pink) image of the galaxy cluster Abell 400 shows radio jets immersed in a vast cloud of multimillion degree X-ray emitting.
AY202a Galaxies & Dynamics Lecture 17: Galaxy Groups & Clusters continued.
2005/9/28 X-ray Universe The electron and magnetic field energies in the east lobe of the radio galaxy Fornax A, measured with XMM-Newton. Naoki.
GH2005 Gas Dynamics in Clusters II Craig Sarazin Dept. of Astronomy University of Virginia A85 Chandra (X-ray) Cluster Merger Simulation.
Simona Ghizzardi, Sabrina De Grandi, Silvano Molendi.
X-RAY FOLLOW-UP OF STRONG LENSING OBJECTS: SL2S GROUPS (AND A1703) FABIO GASTALDELLO (IASF-MILAN, UCI) M. LIMOUSIN & THE SL2S COLLABORATION.
The Fate of the X-Ray Emitting Gas in the Early-Type Galaxy NGC 5044
ICM-ISM Stripping in Virgo Cluster Spiral Galaxies Jeff Kenney (Yale University) with: J. Van Gorkom B. Vollmer H. Crowl * A. Abramson A. Chung J. Cortes.
The morphology of clusters of galaxies: the cluster-galaxy connection Irini Sakelliou Birmingham : T. Ponman MPIA : S. Falter, V. Smolcic, E. Bell MPE.
Energy Balance in Clusters of Galaxies Patrick M. Motl & Jack O. Burns Center for Astrophysics and Space Astronomy University of Colorado at Boulder X-ray.
RGS observations of cool gas in cluster cores Jeremy Sanders Institute of Astronomy University of Cambridge A.C. Fabian, J. Peterson, S.W. Allen, R.G.
Jet Interactions with the Hot Atmospheres of Clusters & Galaxies B.R. McNamara University of Waterloo Girdwood, Alaska May 23, 2007 L. Birzan, P.E.J. Nulsen,
I. Outbursts from Supermassive Black Holes and their Impacts on the Hot Gas in Elliptical Galaxies II. Stripping of Hot Gas from Galaxies C. Jones, W Forman,
X-ray Signatures of Feedback in Intracluster Gas Megan Donahue Michigan State University Collaborators: Mark Voit, Ken Cavagnolo, Steven Robinson, Don.
Probing the Dynamics of Galaxy-Gas Interactions in Groups and Clusters with Chandra and XMM-Newton Marie Machacek Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.
TWO SAMPLES OF X-RAY GROUPS FABIO GASTALDELLO UC IRVINE & BOLOGNA D. BUOTE P. HUMPHREY L. ZAPPACOSTA J. BULLOCK W. MATHEWS UCSC F. BRIGHENTI BOLOGNA.
Shock heating by galaxy- scale radio sources Judith Croston 26 November 2009 Powerful Radio Galaxies: Triggering and Feedback.
Hiroyasu Tajima Stanford Linear Accelerator Center Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology October 26, 2006 GLAST lunch Particle Acceleration.
Challenging the merger/sloshing cold front paradigm: A2142 revisited by XMM Mariachiara Rossetti (Università degli Studi di Milano & IASF Milano) D. Eckert,
Ewan O’Sullivan (SAO) thanks to: J. Vrtilek, L. David, S. Giacintucci, S. Raychaudhury, A. Zezas, and others.
Molecular gas in cooling flows Interplay with AGN and starbursts
DIFFUSE RADIO SOURCES in GROUPS and POOR CLUSTERS
Cen A & its interaction with the X-ray-emitting ISM
The X-ray Evolution of Young Post-Merger
Collisional ISM Heating in Ellipticals: the Case of M86
Dark matter and anomalous gas in the spiral galaxy NGC 4559
THE OUTSKIRTS OF THE NGC 5044 GROUP
Presentation transcript:

Deep Chandra and XMM-Newton Observations of NGC 4472 R. P. Kraft, S. W. Randall, W. R. Forman, P. E. J. Nulsen, C. Jones, A. Bogdan, M. J. Hardcastle, E. Hallman, T. Maccarone, T. Joseph, S. Raychaudhury, D. Evans, G. Sivakoff, C. Sarazin (+ M. Machacek, J. ZuHone, R. Johnson) SAO/University of Hertfordshire/Southampton University/Birmingham University/University of Alberta/University of Virginia 29JUN11 - Presentation at ‘The X-ray Universe 2011’ conference

Introduction – Cluster and Group Mergers – Potpourri of Gas Dynamics Merging is central to the hierarchical formation of structure paradigm Chandra and XMM-Newton have studied large number of cluster and group mergers – Shocks/supersonic infall (e.g. Bullet Cluster) – Cold fronts/ram pressure stripping (e.g. Fornax cluster, M86) – Sloshing (e.g. Abell 1795, NGC 7618/UGC 12941) Shocks Cold Fronts Sloshing

Introduction – Cluster and Group Mergers – Potpourri of Gas Dynamics Merging is central to the hierarchical formation of structure paradigm Chandra and XMM-Newton have studied large number of cluster and group mergers – Shocks/supersonic infall (e.g. Bullet Cluster) – Cold fronts/ram pressure stripping (e.g. Fornax cluster, M86) – Sloshing (e.g. Abell 1795, NGC 7618/UGC 12941) Shocks Cold Fronts Sloshing Entropy, temperature, and emission weighted projected temperature from cold front simulation (Heinz et al. 2003)

Introduction – What is NGC 4472 and why do we care NGC 4472 is most optically luminous galaxy in local Universe Member of Virgo cluster (d=17 Mpc, 1”=80 pc) Lies at virial radius (1.35 Mpc) of the Virgo cluster M SMBH =6x10 8 M  Best example of group/cluster merger in local Universe for detailed study – Proximity – Luminosity – Gas temperature (<1.5 keV) Chandra LP (380 ks total) approved in last AO Received data 3 months ago ROSAT mosaic of Virgo cluster (Bohringer et al. 1995)

Previous X-ray Observations (Biller et al and Kraft et al. 2011) 100 ks XMM-Newton (PI: T. Maccarone) – MOS1+2 in keV band Direction of infallM87

Broadband Overview 380 ks Chandra/ACIS-S Smoothed (  =1.5’’), exposure corrected keV band Point sources removed Features of Interest Multiple Surface Brightness Discontinuities Filamentary Arms Around Radio Bubbles + cavities Large scale X-ray filaments to the E and SW of the nucleus (seen by XMM)

Narrower Bands keV keV

Core Region keV image with radio contours overlaid Temperature map with radio contours overlaid Gas core is clearly sloshing Complex temperature structure aligned with radio lobes - Uplift 9.7 kpc

Radio Outburst Density jump implies M= P mech =1.3x10 57 ergs Significant energy in shocks+ uplift (e.g. filaments in Hyd A) Shock visible in harder band Similar to shocks in M keV band, smoothed exposure corrected

Temperature map (1000 counts per cell) On scales of tens of kpc, hot gas distributed asymmetrically around nucleus Cold filaments to the E and SW of the core – relic buoyant radio bubble? Origin? Related to merger process? Sloshing? Looks much different than Abell 3667 and the simulations of Heinz et al. (2003)

Temperature map (1000 counts per cell) On scales of tens of kpc, cold gas is distributed asymmetrically around nucleus Cold filaments to the E and SW of the core – relic buoyant radio bubble? Origin? Related to merger process? Looks much different than Abell 3667 and the simulations of Heinz et al. (2003) Abell 3667 (Vikhlinin et al. 2001)

Discontinuities in large scale gas k B T=0.96±0.02 keV Z fe =0.47±0.04 Z si =0.68±0.07 k B T=1.04±0.02 Z fe =0.36±0.04 Z si =0.56±0.07 Small temperature jump across discontinuity – significant abundance jump Evidence of flow separation (?) or just sloshing

Discontinuities in large scale gas k B T=0.96±0.02 keV Z fe =0.47±0.04 Z si =0.68±0.07 k B T=1.04±0.02 Z fe =0.36±0.04 Z si =0.56±0.07 Small temperature jump across discontinuity – significant abundance jump Evidence of flow separation (?) or just sloshing Re tail ≈1000 assuming Spitzer type viscosity

Infall into the Virgo Cluster M87 M49 What is NGC 4472 falling into? Infall velocity between 1200 and 2500 km s -1 Could this be the WHIM? Virgo cluster gas falling back into NGC 4472 group potential?

Infall into the Virgo Cluster M87 M49 What is NGC 4472 falling into? Infall velocity between 1000 and 2500 km s -1 Could this be the WHIM? NGC 4522 – small spiral RPS -> 4000 km s -1 !! (Kenney et al. 2004) NGC 4649 group created sloshing structures in M87 (Rodiger et al.2011)

Preliminary Conclusions and Future Work NGC 4472 clearly not a ‘classical’ cold front Disentangling everything will not be trivial! Detected a weak shock around radio lobe + evidence up significant uplift Multiple contact discontinuities in gas tail from merger – flow separation (?) Large-scale mosaic with XMM-Newton from NGC 4472 to NGC 4261 needed! Need better radio data!

Hydrodynamic Simulation of Group/Cluster Merger (from John ZuHone) and Cold Front (Heinz et al. 2003) Entropy, temperature, and emission weighted projected temperature from cold front simulation (Heinz et al. 2003) Temperature slice of supersonic merger

Nuclear Outburst and Feedback Feedback now a central theme in astrophysics – particularly relevant to clusters and galaxies Many Chandra studies of supersonic inflation of radio lobes – Cen A, M87, Per A, Her A, etc. Suppress cooling flows, control star formation, distribute metals Less dramatic outbursts more common and probably more important! Cen A (Kraft et al. 2008) M87 (Forman et al. 2005)

Active Nucleus keV image with radio contours overlaid Temperature map with radio contours overlaid n 0 =0.2 cm -3, k B T=700 eV P bondi =5x10 44 ergs s -1,P mech =5x10 42 ergs s -1, L x = 2x10 38 ergs s -1 Complex temperature structure of gas makes it difficult to study Bondi flow 9.7 kpc

Compact Binary Population Disk BB Temperature versus L x (curves from Gierlinski & Done 2004) Filled squares – NGC 4472 (Joseph et al. in preparation) Crosses – NGC 3379 (Brassington et al. 2009) Dozens/hundreds of points on this graph (Cen A, NGC 4649, M31, etc.)