New XMM-Newton observation of the Phoenix cluster: properties of the cool core
P. Tozzi, F. Gastaldello, S. Molendi, S. Ettori, J. S. Santos, S. De, Grandi, I. Balestra, P. Rosati, B. Altieri, G. Cresci, F. Menanteau, I., Valtchanov

TL;DR
This study analyzes deep X-ray observations of the Phoenix cluster to measure the cooling gas rate and star formation, revealing significant cooling above 1.8 keV and a star formation rate lower than previously thought.
Contribution
First detailed spectral analysis combining XMM-Newton and Chandra data to constrain cooling flow rates and star formation in the Phoenix cluster's core.
Findings
Significant cooling gas detected above 1.8 keV.
Mass deposition rate estimated around 620 M_sun/yr from MOS data.
Star formation rate of approximately 530 M_sun/yr from Herschel data.
Abstract
(Abridged) We present a spectral analysis of a deep (220 ks) XMM-Newton observation of the Phoenix cluster (SPT-CL J2344-4243), which we also combine with Chandra archival ACIS-I data. We extract CCD and RGS X-ray spectra from the core region to search for the signature of cold gas, and constrain the mass deposition rate in the cooling flow which is thought to be responsible of the massive star formation episode observed in the BCG. We find an average mass deposition rate of /yr in the temperature range 0.3-3.0 keV from MOS data. A temperature-resolved analysis shows that a significant amount of gas is deposited only above 1.8 keV, while upper limits of the order of hundreds of /yr can be put in the 0.3-1.8 keV temperature range. From pn data we obtain /yr, and…
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