Particle acceleration in a nearby galaxy cluster pair: the role of cluster dynamics
A. Botteon, R. Cassano, D. Eckert, G. Brunetti, D. Dallacasa, T. W., Shimwell, R. J. van Weeren, F. Gastaldello, A. Bonafede, M. Br\"uggen, L., B\^irzan, S. Clavico, V. Cuciti, F. de Gasperin, S. De Grandi, S. Ettori, S., Ghizzardi, M. Rossetti, H. J. A. R\"ottgering, M. Sereno

TL;DR
This study investigates the connection between cluster dynamics and radio emission by analyzing a nearby galaxy cluster pair with LOFAR and XMM-Newton, discovering a faint radio halo in a merging cluster and none in a relaxed one.
Contribution
It provides new observational evidence linking cluster merger activity to the presence of radio halos in galaxy clusters.
Findings
Detected a low surface brightness radio halo in RXC J1825.3+3026.
No diffuse radio emission observed in CIZA J1824.1+3029.
X-ray surface brightness fluctuations support merger-related non-thermal components.
Abstract
Diffuse radio emission associated with the intra-cluster medium (ICM) is observed in a number of merging galaxy clusters. It is currently believed that in mergers a fraction of the kinetic energy is channeled into non-thermal components, such as turbulence, cosmic rays and magnetic fields, that may lead to the formation of giant synchrotron sources in the ICM. Studying merging galaxy clusters in different evolutionary phases is fundamental to understanding the origin of radio emission in the ICM. We observed the nearby galaxy cluster pair RXC J1825.3+3026 () and CIZA J1824.1+3029 () at 120-168 MHz with the LOw Frequency ARray (LOFAR) and made use of a deep (240 ks) XMM-Newton dataset to study the non-thermal and thermal properties of the system. RXC J1825.3+3026 is in a complex dynamical state, with a primary on-going merger in the E-W direction and a secondary…
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