ASKAP reveals giant radio halos in two merging SPT galaxy clusters -- Making the case for a direction-dependent pipeline --
Amanda G. Wilber, Melanie Johnston-Hollitt, Stefan W. Duchesne, Cyril, Tasse, Hiroki Akamatsu, Huib Intema, and Torrance Hodgson

TL;DR
ASKAP's early science observations successfully detected giant radio halos in two merging galaxy clusters, demonstrating the effectiveness of direction-dependent calibration techniques in producing high-fidelity images and revealing new insights into cluster dynamics.
Contribution
This study applies advanced direction-dependent calibration to ASKAP data, significantly reducing artefacts and enabling clear detection of giant radio halos, including a new discovery in Abell S0592.
Findings
Detected giant radio halos in two merging clusters.
Extended the known radio halo in MACSJ0553.4-3342.
Discovered a new radio halo in Abell S0592.
Abstract
Early science observations from the Australian Square Kilometre Array Pathfinder (ASKAP) have revealed clear signals of diffuse radio emission associated with two clusters detected by the South Pole Telescope via their Sunyaev Zel'dovich signal. SPT CLJ0553-3342 (MACSJ0553.4-3342) and SPT CLJ0638-5358 (Abell S0592) are both high-mass lensing clusters that have undergone major mergers. To improve the data products of these ASKAP early science observations and create science-fidelity images of the galaxy clusters, we performed direction-dependent (DD) calibration and imaging using state-of-the-art software {\sc killMS} and {\sc DDFacet}. We find that artefacts in the ASKAP images are greatly reduced after directional calibration. Here we present our DD calibrated ASKAP radio images of both clusters showing unambiguous giant radio halos with largest linear scales of ~Mpc. The halo…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
