Separating the BL Lac and Cluster X-ray Emissions in Abell 689 with Chandra
P. A. Giles, B. J. Maughan, M. Birkinshaw, D. M. Worrall, K. Lancaster

TL;DR
This study uses Chandra X-ray observations to distinguish between the X-ray emissions of the galaxy cluster Abell 689 and an embedded BL Lac object, revealing the cluster's true luminosity and the nature of the point source.
Contribution
First separation of point source and cluster X-ray emissions in Abell 689 using Chandra, clarifying the cluster's luminosity and identifying the point source as a High-energy peak BL Lac.
Findings
Confirmed the point source as a BL Lac object.
Measured the cluster's bolometric luminosity and temperature.
Detected inverse Compton emission from aged electrons.
Abstract
We present the results of a Chandra observation of the galaxy cluster Abell 689 (z=0.279). Abell 689 is one of the most luminous clusters detected in the ROSAT All Sky Survey (RASS), but was flagged as possibly including significant point source contamination. The small PSF of the Chandra telescope allows us to confirm this and separate the point source from the extended cluster X-ray emission. For the cluster we determine a bolometric luminosity of L_{bol}=(3.3+/-0.3)x10^{44} erg s-1 and a temperature of kT=5.1^{+2.2}_{-1.3} keV when including a physically motivated background model. We compare our measured luminosity for A689 to that quoted in the Rosat All Sky Survey (RASS) and find L_{0.1-2.4,keV}=2.8x10^{44} erg s-1, a value \sim10 times lower than the ROSAT measurement. Our analysis of the point source shows evidence for significant pileup, with a pile-up fraction of ~60%. SDSS…
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