A very deep Chandra view of metals, sloshing and feedback in the Centaurus cluster of galaxies
J.S. Sanders, A.C. Fabian, G.B. Taylor, H.R. Russell, K.M. Blundell,, R.E.A. Canning, J. Hlavacek-Larrondo, S.A. Walker, C.K. Grimes

TL;DR
This paper presents a detailed analysis of deep Chandra X-ray observations of the Centaurus galaxy cluster, revealing complex structures, metallicity variations, and evidence of sloshing, feedback, and instabilities that inform our understanding of cluster dynamics.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed, multi-scale view of the Centaurus cluster, identifying new features like metallicity blobs, cold front instabilities, and periodic structures, advancing knowledge of cluster physics.
Findings
Multiple high-metallicity regions with sharp edges.
Detection of Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities at cold fronts.
Evidence of repeated AGN activity shaping the cluster core.
Abstract
We examine deep Chandra X-ray observations of the Centaurus cluster of galaxies, Abell 3526. Applying a gradient magnitude filter reveals a wealth of structure, from filamentary soft emission on 100pc (0.5 arcsec) scales close to the nucleus to features 10s of kpc in size at larger radii. The cluster contains multiple high-metallicity regions with sharp edges. Relative to an azimuthal average, the deviations of metallicity and surface brightness are correlated, and the temperature is inversely correlated, as expected if the larger scale asymmetries in the cluster are dominated by sloshing motions. Around the western cold front are a series of ~7 kpc 'notches', suggestive of Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities. The cold front width varies from 4 kpc down to close to the electron mean free path. Inside the front are multiple metallicity blobs on scales of 5-10 kpc, which could have been…
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