Chemical enrichment in the cool core of the Centaurus cluster of galaxies
Kotaro Fukushima, Shogo B. Kobayashi, and Kyoko Matsushita

TL;DR
This study analyzes the elemental abundances in the cool core of the Centaurus galaxy cluster using extensive X-ray observations, revealing complex distribution patterns and systematic uncertainties that challenge existing nucleosynthesis models.
Contribution
It provides detailed spatial abundance measurements with new insights into supernova contributions and atomic data uncertainties in galaxy cluster cores.
Findings
Abundance drops sharply within 18 arcsec in the core.
Systematic uncertainties affect absolute abundance measurements.
Supernova models struggle to reproduce observed abundance patterns.
Abstract
Here we present results from over 500 kiloseconds Chandra and XMM-Newton observations of the cool core of the Centaurus cluster. We investigate the spatial distributions of the O, Mg, Si, S, Ar, Ca, Cr, Mn, Fe, and Ni abundances in the intracluster medium with CCD detectors, and those of N, O, Ne, Mg, Fe, and Ni with the Reflection Grating Spectrometer (RGS). The abundances of most of the elements show a sharp drop within the central 18 arcsec, although different detectors and atomic codes give significantly different values. The abundance ratios of the above elements, including Ne/Fe with RGS, show relatively flat radial distributions. In the innermost regions with the dominant Fe-L lines, the measurements of the absolute abundances are challenging. For example, AtomDB and SPEXACT give Fe = 0.5 and 1.4 solar, respectively, for the spectra from the innermost region. These results…
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