X-ray cavities in a sample of 83 SPT-selected clusters of galaxies: Tracing the evolution of AGN feedback in clusters of galaxies out to z=1.2
J. Hlavacek-Larrondo, M. McDonald, B. A. Benson, W. R. Forman, S. W., Allen, L. E. Bleem, M. L. N. Ashby, S. Bocquet, M. Brodwin, J. P. Dietrich,, C. Jones, J. Liu, B. R. Saliwanchik, A. Saro, T. Schrabback, J. Song, B., Stalder, A. Vikhlinin, and A. Zenteno

TL;DR
This study investigates X-ray cavities in 83 high-redshift galaxy clusters to understand AGN feedback evolution, finding evidence of sustained AGN activity over 7 billion years and its impact on cluster heating.
Contribution
First survey of X-ray cavities in high-redshift clusters, showing AGN feedback has remained consistent over half the universe's age.
Findings
Detected 6 clusters with X-ray cavities, mostly low significance
AGN feedback power has remained unchanged for over 7 Gyrs
X-ray cavities may inject significant heat into the intracluster medium
Abstract
X-ray cavities are key tracers of mechanical (or radio mode) heating arising from the active galactic nuclei (AGN) in brightest cluster galaxies. We report on a survey for X-ray cavities in 83 massive, high-redshift (0.4<z<1.2) clusters of galaxies selected by their Sunyaev-Zel'dovich signature in the South Pole Telescope data. Based on Chandra X-ray images, we find a total of 6 clusters having symmetric pairs of surface brightness depressions consistent with the picture of radio jets inflating X-ray cavities in the intracluster medium. The majority of these detections are of relatively low significance and require deeper follow-up data in order to be confirmed. Further, due to the limitations of Chandra at high redshift, this search misses small (<10 kpc), unresolved X-ray cavities at high (z>0.5) redshift. Despite these limitations, our results suggest that the power generated by AGN…
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