Diffuse Radio Sources in a Statistically Complete Sample of High Redshift Galaxy Clusters
G. Giovannini, M. Cau, A. Bonafede, H. Ebeling, L. Feretti, M., Girardi, M. Gitti, F. Govoni, A. Ignesti, M. Murgia, G.B. Taylor, V. Vacca

TL;DR
This study investigates the evolution of diffuse radio sources in high-redshift galaxy clusters, revealing high radio emission prevalence and suggesting redshift evolution in their properties, with implications for cluster merger history.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of diffuse radio sources in a statistically complete sample of high-redshift galaxy clusters, highlighting evolutionary trends.
Findings
High detection rate of radio halos and relics in distant clusters.
Radio properties suggest evolution with redshift.
BCG feedback mechanisms active at z ~ 0.6.
Abstract
Non-thermal properties of galaxy clusters have been studied with detailed and deep radio images in comparison with X-ray data. While much progress has been made, most of the studied clusters are at a relatively low redshift (z < 0.3). We here investigate the evolutionary properties of the non-thermal cluster emission using two statistically complete samples at z > 0.3. We obtained short JVLA observations at L-band of the statistically complete sample of very X-ray luminous clusters from the Massive Cluster Survey (MACS) presented by Ebeling et al. (2010), and redshift range 0.3 - 0.5. We add to this list the complete sample of the 12 most distant MACS clusters (z > 0.5) presented in Ebeling et al. (2007). Most clusters show evidence of emission in the radio regime. We present the radio properties of all clusters in our sample and show images of newly detected diffuse sources. A radio…
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