Extreme AGN Feedback and Cool Core Destruction in the X-ray Luminous Galaxy Cluster MACS J1931.8-2634
Steven Ehlert, Steve Allen, Anja von der Linden, Aurora Simionescu,, Norbert Werner, Greg Taylor, Gianfranco Gentile, Harald Ebeling, Mark T, Allen, Douglas Applegate, Robert Dunn, Andy Fabian, Patrick Kelly, Evan, Million, R. Glenn Morris, Jeremy Sanders, Robert Schmidt

TL;DR
This study reveals how powerful AGN activity can disrupt cool cores in galaxy clusters, using multiwavelength observations of MACS J1931.8-2634 to analyze the complex interactions between AGN feedback, cool gas, and star formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed multiwavelength analysis of a highly disrupted cool core caused by extreme AGN feedback in a luminous galaxy cluster.
Findings
Powerful AGN jets inflate X-ray cavities with energies between 4 and 14e45 erg/s.
Disrupted cool core features a northern ridge with ongoing star formation.
The cluster hosts one of the most profoundly disturbed low entropy cores observed.
Abstract
We report on a deep, multiwavelength study of the galaxy cluster MACS J1931.8-2634 using Chandra X-ray, Subaru optical, and VLA 1.4 GHz radio data. This cluster (z=0.352) harbors one of the most X-ray luminous cool cores yet discovered, with an equivalent mass cooling rate within the central 50 kpc is approximately 700 solar masses/yr. Unique features observed in the central core of MACSJ1931.8-2634 hint to a wealth of past activity that has greatly disrupted the original cool core. We observe a spiral of relatively cool, dense, X-ray emitting gas connected to the cool core, as well as highly elongated intracluster light (ICL) surrounding the cD galaxy. Extended radio emission is observed surrounding the central AGN, elongated in the east-west direction, spatially coincident with X-ray cavities. The power input required to inflate these `bubbles' is estimated from both the X-ray and…
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