MUSE discovers perpendicular arcs in the inner filament of Cen A
Stephen Hamer, Philippe Salom\'e, Francoise Combes, Quentin, Salom\'e

TL;DR
This study uses MUSE/VLT observations to reveal perpendicular arc-like structures in Cen A's inner filament, indicating complex interactions between the AGN jet, shock-induced star formation, and large-scale gas dynamics.
Contribution
It uncovers a previously undetected large arc structure and provides new insights into the role of shocks and backflows in filament formation around Cen A.
Findings
Discovery of three perpendicular arc-like streams in Cen A
Evidence of shock-induced star formation in filaments
Arcs likely caused by jet backflow and external gas sweeping
Abstract
Evidence of AGN interaction with the IGM is observed in some galaxies and many cool core clusters. Radio jets are suspected to dig large cavities into the surrounding gas. In most cases, very large optical filaments are seen around the central galaxy. The origin of these filaments is still not understood. Star-forming regions are sometimes observed inside the filaments and are interpreted as evidence of positive feedback. Cen A is a nearby galaxy with huge optical filaments aligned with the AGN radio-jet direction. We searched for line ratio variations along the filaments, kinematic evidence of shock-broadend line widths, and large-scale dynamical structures. We observed a 1'x1' region around the inner filament of Cen A with MUSE on the VLT during Science Verification. The brightest lines detected are the Halpha, [NII], [OIII] and [SII]. MUSE shows that the filaments are made of clumpy…
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