Feedback under the microscope II: heating, gas uplift, and mixing in the nearest cluster core
N. Werner, A. Simionescu, E. T. Million, S. W. Allen, P. E. J. Nulsen,, A. von der Linden, S. M. Hansen, H. Boehringer, E. Churazov, A. C. Fabian, W., R. Forman, C. Jones, J. S. Sanders, and G. B. Taylor

TL;DR
This study uses multi-wavelength observations of M87 to investigate AGN feedback, gas uplift, and mixing processes, revealing how the AGN influences the cluster core's multiphase medium and suppresses cooling.
Contribution
It provides direct observational evidence of AGN-driven uplift and mixing in the cluster core, highlighting the role of shocks and filaments in the multiphase plasma dynamics.
Findings
Uplifted low entropy gas forms long arms aligned within 15-30 degrees of our line-of-sight.
The mass of uplifted gas is comparable to the core gas mass, showing significant AGN impact.
Strong upper limits on plasma cooling rates indicate heating mechanisms are insufficient to prevent cooling.
Abstract
Using a combination of deep 574ks Chandra data, XMM-Newton high-resolution spectra, and optical Halpha+NII images, we study the nature and spatial distribution of the multiphase plasma in M87. Our results provide direct observational evidence of `radio mode' AGN feedback in action, stripping the central galaxy of its lowest entropy gas and preventing star-formation. This low entropy gas was entrained with and uplifted by the buoyantly rising relativistic plasma, forming long "arms". These arms are likely oriented within 15-30 degrees of our line-of-sight. The mass of the uplifted gas in the arms is comparable to the gas mass in the approximately spherically symmetric 3.8 kpc core, demonstrating that the AGN has a profound effect on its immediate surroundings. The coolest X-ray emitting gas in M87 has a temperature of ~0.5 keV and is spatially coincident with Halpha+NII nebulae, forming…
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