Chandra observation of the cluster environment of a WAT radio source in Abell 1446

Authors
  • E.M. Douglass
  • E.L. Blanton
  • T.E. Clarke
  • C.L. Sarazin
Publication date 2008
Journal Astrophysical Journal
Volume | Issue number 673 | 2
Pages (from-to) 763-777
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Anton Pannekoek Institute for Astronomy (API)
Abstract
Wide-angle tail (WAT) radio sources are often found in the centers of galaxy clusters where intracluster medium (ICM) ram pressure may bend the lobes into their characteristic C-shape. We examine the low-redshift (z = 0.1035) cluster Abell 1446, host to the WAT radio source 1159+583. The cluster exhibits possible evidence for a small-scale cluster-subcluster merger as a cause of the WAT radio source morphology. This evidence includes the presence of temperature and pressure substructure along the line that bisects the WAT, as well as a possible wake of stripped interstellar material or a disrupted cool core to the southeast of the host galaxy. A filament to the north may represent cool, infalling gas that is contributing to the WAT bending, while spectroscopically determined redshifts of member galaxies may indicate some component of a merger occurring along the line of sight. The WAT model of high flow velocity and low lobe density is examined as another scenario for the bending of 1159+583. It has been argued that such a model would allow the ram pressure due to the galaxy's slow motion through the ICM to shape the WAT source. A temperature profile shows that the cluster is isothermal (kT = 4.0 keV) in a series of annuli reaching a radius of ~400 kpc. There is no evidence of an ongoing cooling flow. Temperature, abundance, pressure, density, and mass profiles, as well as two-dimensional maps of temperature and pressure, are presented.
Document type Article
Published at https://doi.org/10.1086/523886
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