The mystery of the 'Kite' radio source in Abell 2626: insights from new Chandra observations
A. Ignesti, M. Gitti, G. Brunetti, E. O'Sullivan, C. Sarazin, K. Wong

TL;DR
This study uses new Chandra X-ray observations of galaxy cluster A2626 to explore the origin of complex radio arcs, revealing a possible link with gas sloshing and turbulence in the intra-cluster medium.
Contribution
It provides detailed thermal and non-thermal analysis of A2626's core, suggesting a new scenario linking radio arcs to gas sloshing and electron reacceleration.
Findings
Discovery of a cold front coincident with radio arcs
Identification of the cool core surrounding the radio arcs
Evidence supporting turbulence-driven electron reacceleration
Abstract
We present the results of a new Chandra study of the galaxy cluster A2626. The radio emission of the cluster shows a complex system of four symmetric arcs without known correlations with the X-ray emission. The mirror symmetry of the radio arcs toward the center and the presence of two optical cores in the central galaxy suggested that they may be created by pairs of precessing radio jets powered by dual AGNs inside the cD galaxy. However, previous observations failed to observe the second jetted AGN and the spectral trend due to radiative age along the radio arcs, thus challenging this interpretation. The new Chandra observation had several scientific objectives, including the search for the second AGN that would support the jet precession model. We focus here on the detailed study of the local properties of the thermal and non-thermal emission in the proximity of the radio arcs, in…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
