Revived Fossil Plasma Sources in Galaxy Clusters
S. Mandal, H. T. Intema, R. J. van Weeren, T. W. Shimwell, A. Botteon,, G. Brunetti, F. de Gasperin, M. Br\"uggen, G. Di Gennaro, R. Kraft, H. J. A., R\"ottgering, M. Hardcastle, and C.Tasse

TL;DR
This paper explores the potential of low-frequency radio surveys to discover and analyze revived fossil plasma sources, or radio phoenices, in galaxy clusters, revealing new sources and understanding their physical properties.
Contribution
The study demonstrates the effectiveness of combining low-frequency radio surveys with multi-band observations to identify and characterize revived fossil plasma sources in galaxy clusters.
Findings
Discovery of two new radio phoenices.
Identification of common properties like ultra-steep spectrum and X-ray luminosity.
Validation of low-frequency surveys for fossil plasma studies.
Abstract
It is well established that particle acceleration by shocks and turbulence in the intra-cluster medium can produce cluster-scale synchrotron emitting sources. However, the detailed physics of these particle acceleration processes is still not well understood. One of the main open questions is the role of fossil relativistic electrons that have been deposited in the intra-cluster medium by radio galaxies. These synchrotron-emitting electrons are very difficult to study, as their radiative life time is only tens of Myrs at GHz frequencies, and are therefore a relatively unexplored population. Despite the typical steep radio spectrum due to synchrotron losses, these fossil electrons are barely visible even at radio frequencies well below a GHz. However, when a pocket of fossil radio plasma is compressed, it boosts the visibility at sub-GHz frequencies, creating so-called radio phoenices.…
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