Chemical Enrichment RGS cluster sample (CHEERS): Constraints on turbulence
Ciro Pinto, Jeremy S. Sanders, Norbert Werner, Jelle de Plaa, Andrew, C. Fabian, Yu-Ying Zhang, Jelle S. Kaastra, Alexis Finoguenov, Jussi, Ahoranta

TL;DR
This study measures turbulence in galaxy clusters using X-ray spectroscopy, finding that turbulence levels vary and may influence cooling processes, with future missions promising improved insights.
Contribution
It provides new constraints on turbulence in galaxy clusters using extensive XMM-Newton RGS data, enhancing previous measurements and analysis techniques.
Findings
Half of the clusters have turbulence upper limits below 500 km/s.
Some clusters exhibit turbulence consistent with velocities over 1000 km/s.
Turbulence levels may be sufficient to prevent cooling in clusters.
Abstract
Feedback from AGN, galactic mergers, and sloshing are thought to give rise to turbulence, which may prevent cooling in clusters. We aim to measure the turbulence in clusters of galaxies and compare the measurements to some of their structural and evolutionary properties. It is possible to measure the turbulence of the hot gas in clusters by estimating the velocity widths of their X-ray emission lines. The RGS Spectrometers aboard XMM-Newton are currently the only instruments provided with sufficient effective area and spectral resolution in this energy domain. We benefited from excellent 1.6Ms new data provided by the CHEERS project. The new observations improve the quality of the archival data and allow us to place constraints for some clusters, which were not accessible in previous work. One-half of the sample shows upper limits on turbulence less than 500km/s. For several sources,…
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