Evolutionary Map of the Universe (EMU): a pilot search for diffuse, non-thermal radio emission in galaxy clusters with the Australian SKA Pathfinder
S. W. Duchesne, A. Botteon, B. S. Koribalski, F. Loi, K. Rajpurohit,, C. J. Riseley, L. Rudnick, T. Vernstrom, H. Andernach, A. M. Hopkins, A. D., Kapinska, R. P. Norris, T. Zafar

TL;DR
This paper reports a pilot search for diffuse, non-thermal radio emission in galaxy clusters using ASKAP, predicting the full EMU survey will significantly expand the known sample of radio halos and relics.
Contribution
It demonstrates the feasibility of detecting diffuse radio emission in galaxy clusters with ASKAP and estimates the number of such sources EMU will discover.
Findings
Detected 21 radio halos and 11 relics in a pilot sample.
Predicted up to 254 radio halos and 85 relics in the full EMU survey.
Found similar diffuse emission occurrence rates as previous LOFAR surveys.
Abstract
Clusters of galaxies have been found to host Mpc-scale diffuse, non-thermal radio emission in the form of central radio halos and peripheral relics. Turbulence and shock-related processes in the intra-cluster medium are generally considered responsible for the emission, though details of these processes are still not clear. The low surface brightness makes detection of the emission a challenge, but with recent surveys with high-sensitivity radio telescopes we are beginning to build large samples of these sources. The Evolutionary Map of the Universe (EMU) is a Southern Sky survey being performed by the Australian SKA Pathfinder (ASKAP) over the next few years and is well-suited to detect and characterise such emission. To assess prospects of the full survey, we have performed a pilot search of diffuse sources in 71 clusters from the Planck Sunyaev-Zeldovich (SZ) cluster catalogue (PSZ2)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Computational Physics and Python Applications
