4.6 Article

The velocity structure of the intracluster medium during a major merger: Simulated microcalorimeter observations

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 663, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/202142764

Keywords

galaxies; clusters; intracluster medium; X-rays; galaxies; clusters; methods; numerical

Funding

  1. Smithsonian Institution Scholarly Studies award Probing the Velocity of the Hot and Dark Universe with Simulations of Galaxy Cluster Mergers
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) [415510302]
  3. Excellence Cluster ORIGINS - DFG under Germany's Excellence Strategy [EXC-2094 - 390783311]
  4. Chandra X-ray Center
  5. European Union [951815]
  6. Smithsonian Institution
  7. Chandra High Resolution Camera Project through NASA [NAS8-03060]
  8. NASA [NAS8-03060, 80NSSC19K0116, GO1-22132X, GO9-20109X]

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High-resolution X-ray spectroscopy enables the measurement of gas velocities in galaxy clusters and the detection of multiple velocity components or gradients. X-ray calorimeters can detect non-Gaussian features in X-ray emission lines, but larger collecting areas and high signal-to-noise ratios are required for measurements in low surface brightness regions. Simulations can be used to study temperature and velocity gradients in galaxy clusters, but the uncertainty in velocity dispersion is significant.
Major mergers between galaxy clusters can produce large turbulent and bulk flow velocities in the intracluster medium (ICM) and thus imprint useful diagnostic features in X-ray spectral emission lines from heavy ions. As successfully achieved by Hitomi in observations of the Perseus cluster, measurements of gas velocities in clusters from high-resolution X-ray spectra will be achievable with upcoming X-ray calorimeters such as those on board XRISM, Athena, or a Lynx like mission. An interesting application to clusters involves detecting multiple velocity components or velocity gradients from diagnostic observations of specific interesting locations across the cluster. To explore this possibility in the case of a major head-on cluster merger, we performed velocity analyzes of a cluster-cluster merger from a hydrodynamical simulation by means of X-ray synthetic spectra with a spectral resolution on the order of a few eV. We observed the system along two extreme line-of-sight directions: (1) perpendicular to the plane of the merger and (2) along the merger axis. In these geometrical configurations, we found that clear non-Gaussian shapes of the iron He-like K alpha line at 6.7 keV are expected. While the velocity dispersion predicted from the simulations can be retrieved for the brightest 100 ks pointings with XRISM Resolve, some discrepancy with respect to the expected value is noted and can be attributed to the complex non-Gaussian line shapes. Measurements in low surface brightness regions, especially when multiple velocity components are present along the line of sight, require high signal-to-noise ratio and the larger collecting area of the Athena X-IFU calorimeter is therefore required. With the latter, we also investigated the ICM temperature and velocity gradient across the merger bow shock edge, from 20 ''-wide annuli extracted from a single 1 Ms X-IFU observation. For both temperature and velocity dispersion, we found best-fit values that are consistent with predictions from the simulations within 1-sigma. The uncertainties on the inferred velocity dispersion are, however, too large to place any stringent constraints on the shallow gradient downstream of the shock. Additionally, we present simulated images of the thermal and kinetic Sunyaev-Zeldovich effects from this merging system, using the above viewing configurations and compare the results at angular resolutions appropriate for future observatories such as CMB-S4 and the Atacama Large Aperture Submillimeter Telescope (AtLAST).

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