A Very Deep Chandra Observation of the Galaxy Group NGC 5813: AGN Shocks, Feedback, and Outburst History
S. W. Randall, P. E. J. Nulsen, C. Jones, W. R. Forman, E. Bulbul, T., E. Clarke, R. Kraft, E. L. Blanton, L. David, N. Werner, M. Sun, M. Donahue,, S. Giacintucci, A. Simionescu

TL;DR
This study presents the deepest Chandra X-ray observations of galaxy group NGC 5813, revealing multiple AGN-driven shocks and cavities, demonstrating stable AGN power over 50 million years, and suggesting shock heating as a key feedback mechanism.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed observation of three cavity pairs with associated shocks in a galaxy group, highlighting the role of shock heating in AGN feedback.
Findings
Three cavity pairs with associated shocks confirmed.
AGN kinetic power remains stable over ~50 Myr.
Shock heating balances radiative cooling at each shock front.
Abstract
We present results from a very deep (650 ks) Chandra X-ray observation of the galaxy group NGC~5813, the deepest Chandra observation of a galaxy group to date. Earlier observations showed two pairs of cavities distributed roughly collinearly, with each pair associated with an elliptical shock front. The new observations confirm a third pair of outer cavities, collinear with the other pairs, and reveal an associated outer outburst shock at ~30 kpc. This system is therefore unique in exhibiting three cavity pairs, each associated with an unambiguous AGN outburst shock front. The implied mean kinetic power is roughly the same for each outburst, demonstrating that the average AGN kinetic luminosity can remain stable over long timescales (~50 Myr). The two older outbursts have larger, roughly equal total energies as compared with the youngest outburst, implying that the youngest outburst is…
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