Residual Cooling and Persistent Star Formation amid AGN Feedback in Abell 2597
G. R. Tremblay, C. P. O'Dea, S. A. Baum, T. E. Clarke, C. L. Sarazin,, J. N. Bregman, F. Combes, M. Donahue, A. C. Edge, A. C. Fabian, G. J., Ferland, B. R. McNamara, R. Mittal, J. B. R. Oonk, A. C. Quillen, H. R., Russell, J. S. Sanders, P. Salom\'e, G. M. Voit, R. J. Wilman

TL;DR
This study uses multiwavelength observations to investigate the complex interplay of AGN feedback, ICM cooling, and star formation in Abell 2597, revealing residual cooling flows and structured star formation amid extensive X-ray cavities.
Contribution
It provides new evidence of persistent residual cooling flows and detailed spatial analysis of star formation and gas dynamics in Abell 2597, integrating X-ray, FIR, and optical data.
Findings
Extensive X-ray cavity network inhibits classical cooling flow.
Residual cooling persists at 4-8% of predicted rates.
Star formation and gas are aligned with radio lobes and cavities.
Abstract
New Chandra X-ray and Herschel FIR observations enable a multiwavelength study of active galactic nucleus (AGN) heating and intracluster medium (ICM) cooling in the brightest cluster galaxy of Abell 2597. The new Chandra observations reveal the central < 30 kiloparsec X-ray cavity network to be more extensive than previously thought, and associated with enough enthalpy to theoretically inhibit the inferred classical cooling flow. Nevertheless, we present new evidence, consistent with previous results, that a moderately strong residual cooling flow is persisting at 4%-8% of the classically predicted rates in a spatially structured manner amid the feedback-driven excavation of the X-ray cavity network. New Herschel observations are used to estimate warm and cold dust masses, a lower-limit gas-to-dust ratio, and a star formation rate consistent with previous measurements. The cooling time…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
