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Autores principales: Lin, Sheng-Chieh, Su, Yuanyuan, Vaezzadeh, Iraj, Forman, William, Roediger, Elke, Romero, Charles, Nulsen, Paul, Randall, Scott W., ZuHone, John, Kraft, Ralph, Jones, Christine
Formato: Preprint
Publicado: 2025
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Acceso en línea:https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.03150
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author Lin, Sheng-Chieh
Su, Yuanyuan
Vaezzadeh, Iraj
Forman, William
Roediger, Elke
Romero, Charles
Nulsen, Paul
Randall, Scott W.
ZuHone, John
Kraft, Ralph
Jones, Christine
author_facet Lin, Sheng-Chieh
Su, Yuanyuan
Vaezzadeh, Iraj
Forman, William
Roediger, Elke
Romero, Charles
Nulsen, Paul
Randall, Scott W.
ZuHone, John
Kraft, Ralph
Jones, Christine
contents The Virgo Cluster is the nearest cool core cluster that features two well-studied sloshing cold fronts at radii of $r \approx 30$ kpc and $r \approx 90$ kpc, respectively. In this work, we present results of XMM-Newton mosaic observations of a third, southwestern, cold front at a radius of $r \approx 250$ kpc, originally discovered with Suzaku. All three cold fronts are likely to be parts of an enormous swirling pattern, rooted in the core. The comparison with a numerical simulation of a binary cluster merger indicates that these cold fronts were produced in the same single event $-$ likely the infall of M49 from the northwest of Virgo and it is now re-entering the cluster from the south. This outermost cold front has probably survived for $2-3$ Gyr since the disturbance. We identified single sharp edges in the surface brightness profiles of the southern and southwestern sections of the cold front, whereas the western section is better characterized with double edges. This implies that magnetic fields have preserved the leading edge of the cold front, while its western side is beginning to split into two cold fronts likely due to Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities. The slopes of the 2D power spectrum of the X-ray surface brightness fluctuations, derived for the brighter side of the cold front, are consistent with the expectation from Kolmogorov turbulence. Our findings highlight the role of cold fronts in shaping the thermal dynamics of the intracluster medium beyond the cluster core, which has important implications for cluster cosmology. Next-generation X-ray observatories, such as the proposed AXIS mission, will be ideal for identifying and characterizing ancient cold fronts.
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institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
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spellingShingle Mapping the Nearest Ancient Sloshing Cold Front in the Sky with XMM-Newton
Lin, Sheng-Chieh
Su, Yuanyuan
Vaezzadeh, Iraj
Forman, William
Roediger, Elke
Romero, Charles
Nulsen, Paul
Randall, Scott W.
ZuHone, John
Kraft, Ralph
Jones, Christine
High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
Astrophysics of Galaxies
The Virgo Cluster is the nearest cool core cluster that features two well-studied sloshing cold fronts at radii of $r \approx 30$ kpc and $r \approx 90$ kpc, respectively. In this work, we present results of XMM-Newton mosaic observations of a third, southwestern, cold front at a radius of $r \approx 250$ kpc, originally discovered with Suzaku. All three cold fronts are likely to be parts of an enormous swirling pattern, rooted in the core. The comparison with a numerical simulation of a binary cluster merger indicates that these cold fronts were produced in the same single event $-$ likely the infall of M49 from the northwest of Virgo and it is now re-entering the cluster from the south. This outermost cold front has probably survived for $2-3$ Gyr since the disturbance. We identified single sharp edges in the surface brightness profiles of the southern and southwestern sections of the cold front, whereas the western section is better characterized with double edges. This implies that magnetic fields have preserved the leading edge of the cold front, while its western side is beginning to split into two cold fronts likely due to Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities. The slopes of the 2D power spectrum of the X-ray surface brightness fluctuations, derived for the brighter side of the cold front, are consistent with the expectation from Kolmogorov turbulence. Our findings highlight the role of cold fronts in shaping the thermal dynamics of the intracluster medium beyond the cluster core, which has important implications for cluster cosmology. Next-generation X-ray observatories, such as the proposed AXIS mission, will be ideal for identifying and characterizing ancient cold fronts.
title Mapping the Nearest Ancient Sloshing Cold Front in the Sky with XMM-Newton
topic High Energy Astrophysical Phenomena
Astrophysics of Galaxies
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2510.03150