Multiple shock structures in a radio selected cluster of galaxies
Shea Brown, Jon Duesterhoeft, and Lawrence Rudnick

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a complex, actively merging galaxy cluster with multiple shock structures, diffuse radio filaments, and a giant radio halo, providing insights into shock and turbulence interactions in cluster evolution.
Contribution
It presents a detailed radio, optical, and X-ray analysis of a unique galaxy cluster with multiple shock features and a giant radio halo, expanding understanding of cluster merger processes.
Findings
Presence of double peripheral radio relics and a giant radio halo.
Detection of unusual diffuse radio filaments inside the relics.
Cluster shows signs of recent merger activity and shock structures.
Abstract
We present a new radio-selected cluster of galaxies, 0217+70, using observations from the Very Large Array and archival optical and X-ray data. The new cluster is one of only seven known that has candidate double peripheral radio relics, and the second of those with a giant radio halo (GRH), as well. It also contains unusual diffuse radio filaments interior to the peripheral relics, and a clumpy, elongated X-ray structure. All of these indicate a very actively evolving system, with ongoing accretion and merger activity, illuminating a network of shocks, such as those first seen in numerical simulations. The peripheral relics are most easily understood as outgoing spherical merger shocks with large variations in brightness along them, likely reflecting the inhomogeneities in the shocks' magnetic fields . The interior filaments could be projections of substructures from the sheet-like…
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