Extreme AGN feedback in the fossil galaxy group SDSSTG 4436
D. Eckert, F. Gastaldello, L. Lovisari, S. McGee, T. Pasini, M. Brienza, K. Kolokythas, E. O'Sullivan, A. Simionescu, M. Sun, M. Ayromlou, M. A. Bourne, Y. Chen, W. Cui, S. Ettori, A. Finoguenov, G. Gozaliasl, R. Kale, F. Mernier, B. D. Oppenheimer, G. Schellenberger, R. Seppi

TL;DR
This study presents multi-wavelength observations of the fossil galaxy group SDSSTG 4436, revealing evidence of extremely energetic AGN outbursts that heated the surrounding gas, disrupted cool cores, and prevented self-regulated feedback.
Contribution
It provides detailed observational evidence of an exceptionally energetic AGN feedback event in a fossil galaxy group, highlighting its impact on gas heating and galaxy evolution.
Findings
The hot atmosphere shows a relaxed morphology with high entropy and cooling time.
The total injected energy from AGN activity is estimated at ~1.5×10^61 ergs.
AGN outbursts can unbind gas and disrupt cool cores, affecting galaxy evolution.
Abstract
Supermassive black hole feedback is the currently favoured mechanism to regulate the star formation rate of galaxies and prevent the formation of ultra-massive galaxies (). However, the mechanism through which the outflowing energy is transferred to the surrounding medium strongly varies from one galaxy evolution model to another, such that a unified model for AGN feedback does not currently exist. The hot atmospheres of galaxy groups are highly sensitive laboratories of the feedback process, as the injected black hole energy is comparable to the binding energy of halo gas particles. Here we report multi-wavelength observations of the fossil galaxy group SDSSTG 4436. The hot atmosphere of this system exhibits a highly relaxed morphology centred on the giant elliptical galaxy NGC~3298. The X-ray emission from the system features a compact core (10 kpc) and a…
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