Deep high-resolution X-ray spectra from cool-core clusters
J.S. Sanders (1), A.C. Fabian (1), K.A. Frank (2), J.R. Peterson (2),, H.R. Russell (1) ((1) Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge, (2), Department of Physics, Purdue University)

TL;DR
This study analyzes deep X-ray spectra from cool-core galaxy clusters, revealing the presence of 0.5 keV gas in small, cold blobs with limited volume filling, and suggests non-radiative cooling mechanisms like mixing.
Contribution
It provides detailed measurements of cool gas properties in galaxy clusters using high-resolution spectra and confirms the low volume filling fractions of cool gas, challenging traditional cooling flow models.
Findings
Detection of Fe XVII lines indicating ~0.5 keV gas
Cool gas exists as low-volume filling blobs
Cooling rates are much lower than predicted by classical models
Abstract
We examine deep XMM-Newton Reflection Grating Spectrometer (RGS) spectra from the cores of three X-ray bright cool core galaxy clusters, Abell 262, Abell 3581 and HCG 62. Each of the RGS spectra show Fe XVII emission lines indicating the presence of gas around 0.5 keV. There is no evidence for O VII emission which would imply gas at still cooler temperatures. The range in detected gas temperature in these objects is a factor of 3.7, 5.6 and 2 for Abell 262, Abell 3581 and HCG 62, respectively. The coolest detected gas only has a volume filling fraction of 6 and 3 per cent for Abell 262 and Abell 3581, but is likely to be volume filling in HCG 62. Chandra spatially resolved spectroscopy confirms the low volume filling fractions of the cool gas in Abell 262 and Abell 3581, indicating this cool gas exists as cold blobs. Any volume heating mechanism aiming to prevent cooling would overheat…
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