XRISM velocity maps of Abell 3571 show subsonic gas motions and thermodynamic asymmetry consistent with early-phase sloshing from an off-axis minor merger with Abell 3572 as candidate perturber.
The major cluster merger in Abell 2034 as seen by XRISM: Strong turbulence and spectral anomalies?
3 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
XRISM observations to date have shown that gas kinetic pressures in the intracluster medium (ICM) tend towards the low end of predictions from cosmological simulations. Here, we present a XRISM observation of the merging cluster Abell 2034, which exhibits the broadest emission lines yet observed in a galaxy cluster. We measure a velocity dispersion of ~470 km/s, corresponding to a kinetic pressure fraction of ~15%. This places A2034 at or above the high end of the theoretical predictions for similar-mass clusters. This large velocity dispersion may reflect Mach ~0.5 turbulence in the ICM and/or result from a core disruption driven by the ongoing head-on merger. We also detect a ~380 km/s gas bulk velocity gradient along the merger axis with an opposite sign to the galaxy velocity gradient, indicating a decoupling of the cluster galaxies (and dark matter) from the ICM. Finally, we report tentative evidence of several spectral anomalies, including a suppressed Fe He$\alpha$-z line, an enhanced Fe Ly$\alpha$-2 line, and a potential absorption feature at ~8.7 keV. The first two features may be explained by the combination of a multi-phase ICM and a non-equilibrium ionization state in the wake of a merger shock. Deeper XRISM observations of this cluster are required to confirm these features. This work highlights the importance of kinematic measurements across a large sample of merging clusters as well as the need for deep XRISM observations to unveil more exotic physics in the ICM.
years
2026 3verdicts
UNVERDICTED 3representative citing papers
XRISM kinematics measurements in A3571 find low uniform velocity dispersion whose implied turbulent heating offsets cooling, with sloshing as a major contributor.
Jet-regulated CCA is controlled by meso-scale transport with turbulence-dependent variability phases and diagnostics distinguishing present vs. feeding cold gas.
citing papers explorer
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Sloshing Motions in Abell 3571 Revealed by XRISM/Resolve Velocity Mapping
XRISM velocity maps of Abell 3571 show subsonic gas motions and thermodynamic asymmetry consistent with early-phase sloshing from an off-axis minor merger with Abell 3572 as candidate perturber.
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Kinematics of Weak Cool-Core Cluster A3571 Observed with XRISM: Low Cooling Rate Balanced by Low Heating Rate
XRISM kinematics measurements in A3571 find low uniform velocity dispersion whose implied turbulent heating offsets cooling, with sloshing as a major contributor.
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BlackHoleWeather -- Jet-regulated chaotic cold accretion across the meso scale: Variability and kinematics
Jet-regulated CCA is controlled by meso-scale transport with turbulence-dependent variability phases and diagnostics distinguishing present vs. feeding cold gas.