A Spectacular Bow Shock in the 11 keV Galaxy Cluster Around 3C 438
Deanna L. Emery, Akos Bogdan, Ralph P. Kraft, Felipe Andrade-Santos,, William R. Forman, Martin J. Hardcastle, Christine Jones

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a prominent bow shock in a hot galaxy cluster caused by a major merger, providing insights into cluster formation dynamics.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed observation of a bow shock in an 11 keV galaxy cluster, using deep Chandra data to analyze shock properties and merger dynamics.
Findings
Detection of two surface brightness jumps indicating shock fronts.
Measurement of a Mach number of approximately 2.3 for the sub-cluster.
Identification of a major merger event driving the bow shock formation.
Abstract
We present results of deep 153 ks Chandra observations of the hot, 11 keV, galaxy cluster associated with the radio galaxy 3C 438. By mapping the morphology of the hot gas and analyzing its surface brightness and temperature distributions, we demonstrate the presence of a merger bow shock. We identify the presence of two jumps in surface brightness and in density located at 400 kpc and 800 kpc from the cluster's core. At the position of the inner jump, we detect a factor of density jump, while at the location of the outer jump, we detect a density drop of a factor of . Combining this with the temperature distribution within the cluster, we establish that the pressure of the hot gas is continuous at the 400 kpc jump, while there is a factor of pressure discontinuity at 800 kpc jump. From the magnitude of the outer pressure…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae · Laser-Plasma Interactions and Diagnostics
