Studying the merging cluster Abell 3266 with eROSITA
J. S. Sanders, V. Biffi, M. Br\"uggen, E. Bulbul, K. Dennerl, K., Dolag, T. Erben, M. Freyberg, E. Gatuzz, V. Ghirardini, D. N. Hoang, M., Klein, A. Liu, A. Merloni, F. Pacaud, M. E. Ramos-Ceja, T. H. Reiprich, J. A., ZuHone

TL;DR
This study uses eROSITA X-ray observations to analyze the complex merging structure of galaxy cluster Abell 3266, revealing substructures, shock features, and background galaxy groups, advancing understanding of cluster mergers.
Contribution
First detailed eROSITA X-ray analysis of Abell 3266 revealing multiple subclusters, shock features, and background sources, providing new insights into cluster merging processes.
Findings
Identification of multiple substructures and merging groups.
Detection of a shock with Mach number ~1.5-1.7.
Discovery of background galaxy groups and clusters.
Abstract
Abell 3266 is one of the X-ray brightest galaxy clusters in the sky and is a well-known merging system. Using the ability of the eROSITA telescope onboard SRG (Spectrum R\"ontgen Gamma) to observe a wide field with a single pointing, we analysed a new observation of the cluster out to a radius of R_200. The X-ray images highlight sub-structures present in the cluster, including the north-east--south-west merger seen in previous ASCA, Chandra, and XMM-Newton data, a merging group towards the north-west, and filamentary structures between the core and one or more groups towards the west. We compute spatially resolved spectroscopic maps of the thermodynamic properties of the cluster, including the metallicity. The merging subclusters are seen as low entropy material within the cluster. The filamentary structures could be the rims of a powerful outburst of an active galactic nucleus, or…
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