Non-thermal emission in galaxy groups at extremely low frequency: the case of A1213
T. Pasini, V. H. Mahatma, M. Brienza, K. Kolokythas, D. Eckert, F. de, Gasperin, R. J. van Weeren, F. Gastaldello, D. Hoang, R. Santra

TL;DR
This study uses low-frequency radio observations to analyze non-thermal emissions in galaxy group A1213, revealing complex interactions between AGN activity, particle re-acceleration, and the environment's influence on galaxy evolution.
Contribution
First low-frequency radio analysis of galaxy group A1213, demonstrating the impact of AGN outbursts and environmental interactions on non-thermal emission.
Findings
Detected a 500 kpc radio tail likely from AGN outburst.
Evidence of mild particle re-acceleration in the tail.
Possible presence of a mini-halo linked to thermal plasma.
Abstract
Galaxy clusters and groups are the last link in the chain of hierarchical structure formation. Their environments can be significantly affected by outbursts from AGN, especially in groups where the medium density is lower and the gravitational potential shallower. The interaction between AGN and group weather can therefore greatly impact their evolution. We investigate the non-thermal radio emission in Abell 1213, a galaxy group which is part of a larger sample of ~50 systems (X-GAP) recently granted XMM-Newton observations. We exploit proprietary LOFAR 54 MHz and uGMRT 380 MHz observations, complementing them with 144 MHz LOFAR survey and XMM-Newton archival data. A1213 hosts a bright AGN associated with one of the central members, 4C 29.41, which was previously optically identified as a dumb-bell galaxy. Observations at 144 MHz at a resolution of 0.3'' allow us to resolve the central…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
