Evidence for Non-Hydrostatic Gas Motions in the Hot ISM of Centaurus A
R. P. Kraft, M. J. Hardcastle, G. R. Sivakoff, A. Jord\'an, P. E. J., Nulsen, M. Birkinshaw, W. R. Forman, C. Jones, D. M. Worrall, J. H. Croston,, D. A. Evans, S. Raychaudhury, S. S. Murray, N. J. Brassington, J. L. Goodger,, W. E. Harris, A. M. Juett, C. L. Sarazin

TL;DR
This study presents evidence of non-hydrostatic gas motions in Centaurus A's hot interstellar medium, revealing a surface brightness discontinuity likely caused by recent merger-induced gas sloshing, affecting jet evolution.
Contribution
First detection of a pressure discontinuity indicating gas sloshing in Centaurus A, linking merger activity to gas dynamics and jet morphology.
Findings
Identified a surface brightness discontinuity at 3.5 kpc from the nucleus.
Estimated gas motion at approximately 470 km/s, near Mach 1.
Suggests merger-driven gas sloshing influences jet evolution.
Abstract
We present preliminary results from a deep (600 ks) {\em Chandra} observation of the hot interstellar medium of the nearby early-type galaxy Centaurus A (Cen A). We find a surface brightness discontinuity in the gas 3.5 kpc from the nucleus spanning a 120 arc. The temperature of the gas is 0.600.05 and 0.680.10 keV, interior and exterior to the discontinuity, respectively. The elemental abundance is poorly constrained by the spectral fits, but if the abundance is constant across the discontinuity, there is a factor of 2.30.4 pressure jump across the discontinuity. This would imply that the gas is moving at 470100 km s, or Mach 1.00.2 (1.20.2) relative to the sound speed of the gas external (internal) to the discontinuity. Alternatively, pressure balance could be maintained if there is a large (factor of 7) discontinuity in the…
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