Redshift Evolution of the Feedback / Cooling Equilibrium in the Core of 48 SPT Galaxy Clusters: A Joint $\boldsymbol{Chandra}$-SPT-ATCA analysis
F. Ruppin, M. McDonald, J. Hlavacek-Larrondo, M. Bayliss, L. E. Bleem,, M. Calzadilla, A. C. Edge, M. D. Filipovi\'c, B. Floyd, G. Garmire, G., Khullar, K. J. Kim, R. Kraft, G. Mahler, R. P. Norris, A. O'Brien, C. L., Reichardt, T. Somboonpanyakul, A. A. Stark, N. Tothill

TL;DR
This study investigates the evolution of the balance between AGN feedback and cooling in galaxy cluster cores over 9 billion years, finding no significant change in their ratio, implying early establishment of feedback mechanisms.
Contribution
It provides the first constraints on the redshift evolution of the feedback/cooling ratio in galaxy clusters up to z=1.3, using joint X-ray and radio data analysis.
Findings
No significant redshift evolution of the feedback/cooling ratio.
High feedback ratios in non-cool core clusters suggest different timescales.
Constraints on the evolution slope are improved by a factor of two.
Abstract
We analyze the cooling and feedback properties of 48 galaxy clusters at redshifts selected from the South Pole Telescope (SPT) catalogs to evolve like the progenitors of massive and well-studied systems at . We estimate the radio power at the brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) location of each cluster from an analysis of Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) data. Assuming that the scaling relation between radio power and active galactic nucleus (AGN) cavity power observed at low redshift does not evolve with redshift, we use these measurements in order to estimate the expected AGN cavity power in the core of each system. We estimate the X-ray luminosity within the cooling radius of each cluster from a joint analysis of the available X-ray and SPT Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) data. This allows us to characterize the…
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