The 700 ks Chandra Spiderweb Field II: Evidence for inverse-Compton and thermal diffuse emission in the Spiderweb galaxy
P. Tozzi, R. Gilli, A. Liu, S. Borgani, M. Lepore, L. Di Mascolo, A., Saro, L. Pentericci, C. Carilli, G. Miley, T. Mroczkowski, M. Pannella, E., Rasia, P. Rosati, C. S. Anderson, A. Calabro', E. Churazov, H. Dannerbauer,, C. Feruglio, F. Fiore, R. Gobat, S. Jin, M. Nonino

TL;DR
This study analyzes deep Chandra X-ray observations of the Spiderweb galaxy at z=2.16, revealing both inverse-Compton scattering in the jets and thermal emission from hot gas, indicating early cluster formation.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed characterization of diffuse X-ray emission around the Spiderweb galaxy, identifying both inverse-Compton and thermal components in a high-redshift protocluster.
Findings
Inverse-Compton emission from jets consistent with CMB upscattering.
Detection of hot ICM with kT~2 keV within 100 kpc.
Estimated total mass of the protocluster within 220 kpc.
Abstract
We present the X-ray imaging and spectral analysis of the diffuse emission around the Spiderweb galaxy at z=2.16 and of its nuclear emission, based on a deep (700 ks) Chandra observation. We characterize the nuclear emission and computed the contamination in the surrounding regions due to the wings of the instrument PSF. Then, we quantified the extended emission within 12". We find that the Spiderweb galaxy hosts a mildly absorbed quasar, with modest yet significant variability on a timescale of ~1 year. We find that the emission in the jet regions is well described by a power law with Gamma~2-2.5, and it is consistent with IC upscattering of the CMB photons by the relativistic electrons. We also find a roughly symmetric, diffuse emission within a radius of ~100 kpc. This emission is consistent with thermal bremsstrahlung from a hot ICM with a temperature of kT=2.0_{-0.4}^{+0.7} keV,…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Scientific Research and Discoveries
