Shocks and Cavities from Multiple Outbursts in the Galaxy Group NGC 5813: A Window to AGN Feedback
S. W. Randall, W. R. Forman, S. Giacintucci, P. E. J. Nulsen, M. Sun,, C. Jones, E. Churazov, L. P. David, R. Kraft, M. Donahue, E. L. Blanton, A., Simionescu, N. Werner

TL;DR
This study analyzes multiple AGN outbursts in galaxy group NGC 5813 through multi-wavelength observations, revealing cavities, shocks, and cool gas filaments, providing insights into AGN feedback mechanisms over millions of years.
Contribution
It presents detailed evidence of three distinct AGN outbursts with associated cavities and shocks, offering a comprehensive view of feedback processes in a relaxed galaxy group.
Findings
Three pairs of cavities from separate outbursts identified
Shocks with Mach numbers ~1.5-1.7 detected around cavities
Significant variation in outburst power and energy over time
Abstract
We present results from new Chandra, GMRT, and SOAR observations of NGC 5813, the dominant central galaxy in a nearby galaxy group. The system shows three pairs of collinear cavities at 1 kpc, 8 kpc, and 20 kpc from the central source, from three distinct outbursts of the central AGN, which occurred 3x10^6, 2x10^7, and 9x10^7 yr ago. The H-alpha and X-ray observations reveal filaments of cool gas that has been uplifted by the X-ray cavities. The inner two cavity pairs are filled with radio emitting plasma, and each pair is associated with an elliptical surface brightness edge, which we unambiguously identify as shocks (with measured temperature jumps) with Mach numbers of M~1.7 and M~1.5 for the inner and outer shocks, respectively. Such clear signatures from three distinct AGN outbursts in an otherwise dynamically relaxed system provide a unique opportunity to study AGN feedback and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena
