First LOFAR observations at very low frequencies of cluster-scale non-thermal emission: the case of Abell 2256
R. J. van Weeren, H. J. A. Rottgering, D. A. Rafferty, R. Pizzo, A., Bonafede, M. Bruggen, G. Brunetti, C. Ferrari, E. Orru, G. Heald, J. P., McKean, C. Tasse, F. de Gasperin, L. Birzan, J. E. van Zwieten, S. van der, Tol, A. Shulevski, N. Jackson, A. R. Offringa, J. Conway

TL;DR
This paper presents the first low-frequency LOFAR observations of Abell 2256, revealing detailed diffuse radio emissions including a halo and relic at frequencies as low as 20 MHz, and providing insights into particle acceleration mechanisms.
Contribution
First LOFAR low-frequency observations of Abell 2256, detecting diffuse emissions at unprecedented low frequencies and analyzing their spectral properties.
Findings
Detection of radio halo and relic at 63 MHz
Confirmation of ultra-steep spectrum source with spectral index -2.3
Relatively flat spectral index of relic suggests recent shock acceleration
Abstract
Abell 2256 is one of the best known examples of a galaxy cluster hosting large-scale diffuse radio emission that is unrelated to individual galaxies. It contains both a giant radio halo and a relic, as well as a number of head-tail sources and smaller diffuse steep-spectrum radio sources. The origin of radio halos and relics is still being debated, but over the last years it has become clear that the presence of these radio sources is closely related to galaxy cluster merger events. Here we present the results from the first LOFAR Low band antenna (LBA) observations of Abell 2256 between 18 and 67 MHz. To our knowledge, the image presented in this paper at 63 MHz is the deepest ever obtained at frequencies below 100 MHz in general. Both the radio halo and the giant relic are detected in the image at 63 MHz, and the diffuse radio emission remains visible at frequencies as low as 20 MHz.…
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