XRISM Reveals Complex Multi-Temperature Structures in the Abell 2029 Galaxy Cluster
Arnab Sarkar, Eric Miller, Naomi Ota, Caroline Kilbourne, Brian McNamara, Ming Sun, Lorenzo Lovisari, Stefano Ettori, Dominique Eckert, Andrew Szymkowiak, Tommaso Bartalesi, and Michael Loewenstein

TL;DR
XRISM observations of Abell 2029 reveal complex multi-temperature gas structures, including cooler components and signs of ongoing cooling, advancing understanding of galaxy cluster thermal dynamics.
Contribution
This study provides the first detailed multi-temperature analysis of Abell 2029 using XRISM, identifying cooler gas components and evidence of gas sloshing and cooling processes.
Findings
Detection of multi-phase gas with temperature deviations from single-temperature models.
Identification of cooler gas components at 3.42 keV and 4.3 keV.
Evidence of ongoing cooling potentially leading to star formation.
Abstract
We present 500 ks XRISM observations covering the central and two northern regions of the Abell 2029 galaxy cluster. Resolve enables us to distinguish multiple emission lines from hydrogen-like and helium-like iron (Fe) ions. This study focuses on the multi-temperature structure of Abell 2029 using line-ratio diagnostics. Using a single-temperature collisionally ionized equilibrium model, we measure average plasma temperatures of 6.73 keV, 7.61 keV, and 8.14 keV in the central, inner northern, and outer northern regions, respectively, spanning a radial range up to 700 kpc. To further investigate thermal structure, we derive excitation and ionization temperatures by comparing observed emission-line flux ratios with atomic database predictions. Significant deviations from the single-temperature CIE model in the central and inner northern regions indicate the presence of multi-phase…
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