4.7 Article

The Coma Cluster at LOFAR Frequencies. II. The Halo, Relic, and a New Accretion Relic

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 933, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/ac721d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ERC Starting Grant DRANOEL [714245]
  2. MIUR grant FARE SMS
  3. ERC Starting Grant MAGCOW [714196]
  4. ASI-INAF [2019-27-HH.0, 2017-14H.0]
  5. European Union's Horizon 2020 Programme under the AHEAD2020 project [871158]
  6. INFN through the InDark initiative
  7. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany's Excellence Strategy [EXC 2121, 390833306]
  8. VIDI research program - Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) [639.042.729]
  9. ERC Starting Grant ClusterWeb [804208]
  10. Chinese Scholarship Council (CSC)
  11. Women In Science Excel (WISE) program of the NWO
  12. INAF mainstream project Galaxy Clusters science with LOFAR
  13. European Research Council (ERC) [714196, 714245] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Observations of the Coma Cluster field using LOw Frequency ARray at 144 MHz provide insights into particle acceleration mechanisms and energy distribution within the cluster. New features and radial changes are discovered.
We present LOw Frequency ARray observations of the Coma Cluster field at 144 MHz. The cluster hosts one of the most famous radio halos, a relic, and a low surface brightness bridge. We detect new features that allow us to make a step forward in the understanding of particle acceleration in clusters. The radio halo extends for more than 2 Mpc, which is the largest extent ever reported. To the northeast of the cluster, beyond the Coma virial radius, we discover an arc-like radio source that could trace particles accelerated by an accretion shock. To the west of the halo, coincident with a shock detected in the X-rays, we confirm the presence of a radio front, with different spectral properties with respect to the rest of the halo. We detect a radial steepening of the radio halo spectral index between 144 and 342 MHz, at similar to 30 ' from the cluster center, that may indicate a non-constant re-acceleration time throughout the volume. We also detect a mild steepening of the spectral index toward the cluster center. For the first time, a radial change in the slope of the radio-X-ray correlation is found, and we show that such a change could indicate an increasing fraction of cosmic-ray versus thermal energy density in the cluster outskirts. Finally, we investigate the origin of the emission between the relic and the source NGC 4789, and we argue that NGC 4789 could have crossed the shock originating the radio emission visible between its tail and the relic.

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