4
$\begingroup$

Gizmodo's Astronomers Spot Mysterious, 10-Million-Light-Year-Long Magnetic Field Connecting Two Galaxy Clusters shows the image below, and Space.com's A Weird 'Radio Bridge' 10 Million-Light Years Long Links Colliding Galaxy Clusters discusses it as well.

They both link to the new paper in Science A radio ridge connecting two galaxy clusters in a filament of the cosmic web (also arXiv).

What I've gathered so far is that seen between two known and characterized clusters of galaxies, there is a region with some excess continuum radio power at 140 MHz and some excess continuum X-ray power.

Neither of these are spectral features so their distances can't be associated with the galactic clusters by doppler shift.

Question: How do they know that the X-ray and Radio continuum are both really coming from the space between these two clusters of galaxies, and not in front of or behind it?

"bonus points" how does Planck's "y parameter" figure in to this mix?

“A radio ridge connecting two galaxy clusters in a filament of the cosmic web”, F. Govoni et al. 2019, Science. Optical: DSS and Pan STAARS (insets) — Red, X-rays: XMM-Newton — Yellow, y-parameter: Planck satellite — Blue, radio 140 MHz: LOFAR. Image credits: M. Murgia - INAF

The two galactic clusters and the intervening radio ridge. Image: DSS and Pan-STARRS1 (Optical), XMM-Newton (X-rays) PLANCK Satellite (y paramter), F. Govoni, M. Murgia, INAF

enter image description here

$\endgroup$
2

1 Answer 1

3
+100
$\begingroup$

I think the answer is that it's primarily a matter of association on the sky, though there are some (weak) additional constraints.

The first thing to note is that there are three observations that are associated on the sky: the X-ray emission (which has been known about since the mid 1990s), the newly detected 140 MHz LOFAR emission, and evidence for a Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect in the same region, from Planck data (e.g., Bonjean et al. 2018). From the caption to Figure 3 in the new paper: "The Planck data show a bridge of gas between the pair of galaxy clusters Abell 0399 – Abell 0401, in the same location as the LOFAR ridge." and from the main text: "The radio ridge is located along the filament of gas connecting Abell 0399 and Abell 0401 detected with Planck (9, 10)."

(The "Planck $y$-parameter", also known as the "Compton parameter", refers to the measurement of the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect due to inverse Compton scattering of cosmic background radiation photons, derived from Planck satellite data. I believe it's proportional to the line-of-sight integral of the gas pressure.)

The Suzaku X-ray spectrum of this region (e.g., Figure 2 of Fujita et al. 2008; see below) does have some spectral features, including the Fe K emission line. Due to the low spectral resolution, these features don't constrain the redshift of the X-ray-emitting gas very strongly (and I think Fujita et al. fixed the redshift at the mean of the two clusters in their analysis), but it would probably be noticeable if it differed by more than $\sim 0.1$ in redshift.

enter image description here

From Figure 2 of Fujita et al. (2008): Suzaku X-ray spectrum of part of the "bridge" region between the two clusters. Black is observed data, red is the combined model, including Galactic and extragalactic background (dashed blue), and emission from the inter-cluster gas (green).

$\endgroup$
3

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .