Intragroup and Galaxy-Linked Diffuse X-ray Emission in Hickson Compact Groups
Tyler D. Desjardins, Sarah C. Gallagher, Panayiotis Tzanavaris, John, S. Mulchaey, William N. Brandt, Jane C. Charlton, Gordon P. Garmire, Caryl, Gronwall, Ann E. Hornschemeier, Kelsey E. Johnson, Iraklis S., Konstantopoulos, Ann I. Zabludoff

TL;DR
This study investigates diffuse X-ray emission in Hickson compact galaxy groups, revealing that most emission is linked to individual galaxies and star formation, challenging the idea that these groups are simple low-mass cluster analogs.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed analysis of diffuse X-ray emission in a subset of Hickson compact groups, highlighting the link to galaxy activity and interactions.
Findings
Most groups show detectable diffuse X-ray emission linked to galaxies.
X-ray luminosity correlates with HI properties and star formation activity.
Hot gas is not in hydrostatic equilibrium in these groups.
Abstract
Isolated compact groups of galaxies (CGs) present a range of dynamical states, group velocity dispersions, and galaxy morphologies with which to study galaxy evolution, particularly the properties of gas both within the galaxies and in the intragroup medium. As part of a large, multiwavelength examination of CGs, we present an archival study of diffuse X-ray emission in a subset of nine Hickson compact groups observed with the Chandra X-ray Observatory. We find that seven of the groups in our sample exhibit detectable diffuse emission. However, unlike large-scale emission in galaxy clusters, the diffuse features in the majority of the detected groups are linked to the individual galaxies, in the form of both plumes and halos likely as a result of star formation or AGN activity, as well as in emission from tidal features. Unlike previous studies from earlier X-ray missions, HCGs 31, 42,…
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