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High Resolution X-ray Spectra of Cluster Cooling Flows | Craig L. Sarazin
; | Date: |
5 Dec 1996 | Subject: | astro-ph | Affiliation: | University of Virginia | Abstract: | The cooling cores of clusters of galaxies are among the brightest thermal X-ray line sources in the universe. High resolution X-ray spectra would allow individual line fluxes to be measured. The fluxes of low ionization X-ray lines in cooling flows should be directly proportional to the cooling rate at relatively cool temperatures, and could be used to determine whether large amounts of gas are really cooling out of the X-ray band (below 10e6 K). By comparing the fluxes of many X-ray lines, we could determine the amounts of gas at different temperatures and densities. This would allow one to test the idea that cooling flows are highly inhomogeneous, as required to explain their surface brightness profiles. High resolution X-ray spectra can be used to determine velocities in the hot gas in cooling flows. If the gas is homogeneous, significant inflow velocities are expected. However, if the gas is as inhomogeneous as we currently believe, the inflow velocities are likely to be rather low (v < 30 km/s). Most of the central galaxies in cooling flows host radio sources, and it appears that the radio lobes are expanding against, displacing, and compressing the cooling X-ray gas. Significant motions associated with the expansion of radio sources should be detectable in X-ray lines. If the cooling X-ray gas rotates and viscosity is not important, rotational motions may also be detectable in X-ray line spectra. | Source: | arXiv, astro-ph/9612049 | Services: | Forum | Review | PDF | Favorites |
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