An X-ray cooling-core cluster surrounding a low power Compact Steep Spectrum Radio source 1321+045
M. Kunert-Bajraszewska, A. Siemiginowska, A. Labiano

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of an X-ray emitting galaxy cluster hosting a low-power CSS radio source, providing insights into cluster properties and the interaction between young radio sources and their environment.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed analysis of a cooling-core cluster surrounding a low-power CSS radio source, expanding understanding of cluster-radio source interactions.
Findings
Cluster exhibits a cooling core with temperature ~4.4 keV.
Radio source shows no significant impact on the cluster medium.
Cluster mass estimated at 1.5x10^{14} solar masses.
Abstract
We discovered an X-ray cluster in a Chandra observation of the compact steep spectrum (CSS) radio source 1321+045 (z=0.263). CSS sources are thought to be young radio objects at the beginning of their evolution and can potentially test the cluster heating process. 1321+045 is a relatively low luminosity source and its morphology consists of two radio lobes on the opposite sides of a radio core with no evidence for jets or hotspots. The optical emission line ratios are consistent with an interstellar medium (ISM) dominated by AGN-photoionization with a small contribution from star formation, and no contributions from shocks. Based on these ratios, we classify 1321+045 as a low excitation galaxy (LEG) and suggest that its radio activity is in a coasting phase. The X-ray emission associated with the radio source is detected with 36.1+/-8.3 counts, but the origin of this emission is highly…
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