Discovery of O VII line emitting gas in elliptical galaxies
Ciro Pinto, Andrew C. Fabian, Norbert Werner, Peter Kosec, Jussi, Ahoranta, Jelle de Plaa, Jelle S. Kaastra, Jeremy S. Sanders, Yu-Ying Zhang,, Alexis Finoguenov

TL;DR
This study reports the first detection of O VII emission lines in individual elliptical galaxies, providing new insights into cooling flows and gas properties in galaxy cores using XMM-Newton RGS data.
Contribution
First detection of O VII lines in individual elliptical galaxies, revealing resonance scattering effects and low turbulence in their cores.
Findings
O VII detected in six elliptical galaxies at >3 sigma significance.
Spectra affected by resonance scattering, indicating low turbulence.
O VII luminosities suggest weak cooling rates consistent with predictions.
Abstract
In the cores of ellipticals, clusters, and groups of galaxies, the gas has a cooling time shorter than 1 Gyr. It is possible to probe cooling flows through the detection of Fe XVII and O VII emission lines, but so far O VII has not been detected in any individual object. The Reflection Grating Spectrometers (RGS) aboard XMM-Newton are currently the only instruments able to detect O VII in extended objects such as elliptical galaxies and galaxy clusters. We searched for evidence of O VII through all the archival RGS observations of galaxy clusters, groups of galaxies, and elliptical galaxies focusing on those with core temperatures below 1 keV. We have discovered O VII resonance (21.6A) and forbidden (22.1A) lines for the first time in the spectra of individual objects. O VII was detected at a level higher than three sigma in six elliptical galaxies: M 84, M 86, M 89, NGC 1316, NGC 4636,…
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