Measurements of resonant scattering in the Perseus cluster core with Hitomi SXS
Hitomi Collaboration: Felix Aharonian, Hiroki Akamatsu, Fumie Akimoto,, Steven W. Allen, Lorella Angelini, Marc Audard, Hisamitsu Awaki, Magnus, Axelsson, Aya Bamba, Marshall W. Bautz, Roger Blandford, Laura W. Brenneman,, Greg V. Brown, Esra Bulbul, Edward M. Cackett

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates the first detailed measurement of resonant scattering effects in the Perseus cluster core using Hitomi SXS, revealing how RS influences emission line fluxes and shapes, and constrains gas velocities.
Contribution
It provides the first observational evidence of resonant scattering effects in galaxy clusters and quantifies its impact on emission line profiles using high-resolution X-ray spectroscopy.
Findings
Resonant scattering suppresses the FeXXV Heα line flux by ~1.3 in the core.
The FeXXV Heα line appears slightly broader due to RS effects.
Gas velocities inferred from RS are consistent with line broadening measurements.
Abstract
Thanks to its high spectral resolution (~5 eV at 6 keV), the Soft X-ray Spectrometer (SXS) on board Hitomi enables us to measure the detailed structure of spatially resolved emission lines from highly ionized ions in galaxy clusters for the first time. In this series of papers, using the SXS we have measured the velocities of gas motions, metallicities and the multi-temperature structure of the gas in the core of the Perseus cluster. Here, we show that when inferring physical properties from line emissivities in systems like Perseus, the resonant scattering (RS) effect should be taken into account. In the Hitomi waveband, RS mostly affects the FeXXV He line () - the strongest line in the spectrum. The flux measured by Hitomi in this line is suppressed by a factor ~1.3 in the inner ~30 kpc, compared to predictions for an optically thin plasma; the suppression decreases with…
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