The "toothbrush-relic": evidence for a coherent linear 2-Mpc scale shock wave in a massive merging galaxy cluster?
R. J. van Weeren, H. J. A. Rottgering, H. T. Intema, L. Rudnick, M., Bruggen, M. Hoeft, J. B. R. Oonk

TL;DR
This study presents multi-frequency radio and X-ray observations of galaxy cluster 1RXS J0603.3+4214, revealing a large, linear radio relic with spectral gradients, suggesting shock acceleration and complex merger dynamics.
Contribution
It provides detailed spectral and polarization analysis of a unique linear radio relic, supporting shock acceleration models and revealing complex merger processes in the galaxy cluster.
Findings
Detection of a 1.9 Mpc radio relic with spectral index gradient
Spectral analysis supports first-order Fermi acceleration at the relic
Evidence of merger-induced turbulence possibly re-accelerating particles
Abstract
Some merging galaxy clusters host diffuse extended radio emission, so-called radio halos and relics. Here we present observations between 147 MHz and 4.9 GHz of a new radio-selected galaxy cluster 1RXS J0603.3+4214 (z=0.225). The cluster is also detected as an extended X-ray source in the RASS. It hosts a large bright 1.9 Mpc radio relic, an elongated ~2 Mpc radio halo, and two smaller radio relics. The large radio relic has a peculiar linear morphology. For this relic we observe a clear spectral index gradient, in the direction towards the cluster center. We performed Rotation Measure (RM) Synthesis between 1.2 and 1.7 GHz. The results suggest that for the west part of the large relic some of the Faraday rotation is caused by ICM and is not only due to galactic foregrounds. We also carried out a detailed spectral analysis of this radio relic and created radio color-color diagrams. We…
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