# Disturbed Fossil Group Galaxy NGC 1132

**Authors:** Dong-Woo Kim, Craig Anderson, Doug Burke, Giuseppina Fabbiano,, Antonella Fruscione, Jen Lauer, Michael McCollough, Doug Morgan, Amy Mossman,, Ewan O'Sullivan, Alessandro Paggi, Saeqa Vrtilek, and Ginevra Trinchieri

arXiv: 1706.04609 · 2018-02-14

## TL;DR

This study analyzes Chandra X-ray data of NGC 1132, revealing a disturbed hot gas halo contrary to expectations for fossil groups, suggesting recent merger activity and prompting a reevaluation of fossil system characteristics.

## Contribution

The paper provides the first detailed X-ray analysis showing that NGC 1132's hot halo is disturbed, indicating recent merger activity in a system previously thought to be relaxed.

## Key findings

- Hot gas morphology is disturbed and asymmetrical.
- Evidence of a cold front and possible bow shock.
- Likely recent minor merger activity.

## Abstract

We have analyzed the Chandra archival data of NGC 1132, a well-known fossil group, i.e. a system expected to be old and relaxed long after the giant elliptical galaxy assembly. Instead, the Chandra data reveal that the hot gas morphology is disturbed and asymmetrical, with a cold front following a possible bow shock. We discuss possible origins of the disturbed hot halo, including sloshing by a nearby object, merger, ram pressure by external hotter gas and nuclear outburst. We consider that the first two mechanisms are likely explanations for the disturbed hot halo, with a slight preference for a minor merger with a low impact parameter because of the match with simulations and previous optical observations. In this case, NGC 1132 may be a rare example of unusual late mergers seen in recent simulations. Regardless of the origin of the disturbed hot halo, the paradigm of the fossil system needs to be reconsidered.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1706.04609