Probing particle acceleration in Abell 2256: from to 16 MHz to gamma rays
E. Osinga, R. J. van Weeren, G. Brunetti, R. Adam, K. Rajpurohit, A., Botteon, J. R. Callingham, V. Cuciti, F. de Gasperin, G. K. Miley, H. J. A., R\"ottgering, and T. W. Shimwell

TL;DR
This study presents the deepest low-frequency radio observations of galaxy cluster Abell 2256, revealing detailed spectral properties of diffuse sources and challenging hadronic models for the radio halo's origin.
Contribution
It provides new low-frequency radio data from 16 to 168 MHz, resolving various diffuse sources and analyzing their spectral behavior, which advances understanding of particle acceleration in galaxy clusters.
Findings
Detected and resolved radio halo, shock, and steep spectrum sources.
Found spectral index fluctuations indicating inhomogeneous emission.
Ruled out hadronic models for the radio halo unless magnetic fields are unusually high.
Abstract
Merging galaxy clusters often host spectacular diffuse radio synchrotron sources. These sources can be explained by a non-thermal pool of relativistic electrons accelerated by shocks and turbulence in the intracluster medium. The origin of the pool and details of the cosmic ray transport and acceleration mechanisms in clusters are still open questions. Due to the often extremely steep spectral indices of diffuse radio emission, it is best studied at low frequencies. However, the lowest frequency window available to ground-based telescopes (10-30 MHz) has remained largely unexplored, as radio frequency interference and calibration problems related to the ionosphere become severe. Here, we present LOFAR observations from 16 to 168 MHz targeting the famous cluster Abell 2256. In the deepest-ever images at decametre wavelengths, we detect and resolve the radio halo, radio shock and various…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
