Diffuse Radio Emission in/around the Coma Cluster: Beyond Simple Accretion
Shea Brown, Lawrence Rudnick

TL;DR
This paper presents new radio observations of the Coma cluster revealing extended relics and shock fronts, challenging existing models of electron acceleration and suggesting complex intracluster medium dynamics.
Contribution
It provides the first detection of an extended, polarized radio relic likely caused by an infall shock, and analyzes the correlation between radio and X-ray emissions in the cluster.
Findings
Detection of a ~2 Mpc polarized radio relic possibly from an infall shock
Identification of a shock front coincident with X-ray discontinuities
Radio-X-ray brightness correlation inconsistent with simple shock models
Abstract
We report on new 1.41 GHz Green Bank Telescope and 352 MHz Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope observations of the Coma cluster and its environs. At 1.41 GHz we tentatively detect an extension to the Coma cluster radio relic source 1253+275 which makes its total extent ~2 Mpc. This extended relic is linearly polarized as seen in our GBT data, the NVSS, and archival images, strengthening a shock interpretation. The extended relic borders a previously undetected "wall" of galaxies in the infall region of the Coma cluster. We suggest that the radio relic is an infall shock, as opposed to the outgoing merger shocks believed responsible for other radio relics. We also find a sharp edge, or "front", on the western side of the 352 MHz radio halo. This front is coincident with a similar discontinuity in the X-ray surface brightness and temperature in its southern half, suggesting a primary…
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