Herschel observations of the Centaurus cluster - the dynamics of cold gas in a cool core
Rupal Mittal, Christopher P. O'Dea, Gary Ferland, Raymond Oonk,, Alastair C. Edge, Rebecca E. A. Canning, Helen Russell, Stefi A. Baum, Hans, B\"ohringer, Francoise Combes, Megan Donahue, Andy C. Fabian, Nina A. Hatch,, Aaron Hoffer, Roderick Johnstone, Brian R. McNamara

TL;DR
This study uses Herschel FIR observations of the Centaurus cluster's BCG to analyze cold gas dynamics, star formation, and energy sources, revealing extended CII emission linked to multiple energy processes in the galaxy core.
Contribution
First detailed Herschel FIR spectral and photometric analysis of NGC 4696, linking multi-wavelength emission lines to gas dynamics and energy sources in a cool-core galaxy cluster.
Findings
CII emission extends over 7 kpc with similar morphology to H-alpha.
Detected cold and warm dust components with specific temperatures and masses.
Star formation rate estimated at 0.13 solar masses per year.
Abstract
Brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) in the cores of galaxy clusters have distinctly different properties from other low redshift massive ellipticals. The majority of the BCGs in cool-core clusters show signs of active star formation. We present observations of NGC 4696, the BCG of the Centaurus galaxy cluster, at far-infrared (FIR) wavelengths with the Herschel space telescope. Using the PACS spectrometer, we detect the two strongest coolants of the interstellar medium, CII at 157.74 micron and OI at 63.18 micron, and in addition NII at 121.90 micron. The CII emission is extended over a region of 7 kpc with a similar spatial morphology and kinematics to the optical H-alpha emission. This has the profound implication that the optical hydrogen recombination line, H-alpha, the optical forbidden lines, NII 6583 Angstrom, the soft X-ray filaments and the far-infrared CII line all have the same…
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