XRISM kinematics measurements in A3571 find low uniform velocity dispersion whose implied turbulent heating offsets cooling, with sloshing as a major contributor.
Improved measurements of turbulence in the hot gaseous atmospheres of nearby giant elliptical galaxies
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abstract
We present significantly improved measurements of turbulent velocities in the hot gaseous halos of nearby giant elliptical galaxies. Using deep XMM-Newton Reflection Grating Spectrometer (RGS ) observations and a combination of resonance scattering and direct line broadening methods, we obtain well bounded constraints for 13 galaxies. Assuming that the turbulence is isotropic, we obtain a best fit mean 1D turbulent velocity of ~110 km/s. This implies a typical 3D Mach number ~0.45 and a typical non-thermal pressure contribution of ~6 per cent in the cores of nearby massive galaxies. The intrinsic scatter around these values is modest - consistent with zero, albeit with large statistical uncertainty - hinting at a common and quasi-continuous mechanism sourcing the velocity structure in these objects. Using conservative estimates of the spatial scales associated with the observed turbulent motions, we find that turbulent heating can be sufficient to offset radiative cooling in the inner regions of these galaxies (<10 kpc, typically 2-3 kpc). The full potential of our analysis methods will be enabled by future X-ray microcalorimeter observations.
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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.