Radio haloes in Sunyaev-Zel'dovich-selected clusters of galaxies: The making of a halo?

Radio haloes are synchrotron radio sources detected in some massive galaxy clusters. Their size of Mpc indicates that (re)acceleration processes are taking place in the host cluster. X-ray catalogues of galaxy clusters have been used in the past to search for radio haloes and to understand their con...

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Main Authors: Bonafede, A., Intema, Hubertus, Brüggen, M., Vazza, F., Basu, K., Sommer, M., Ebeling, H., De Gasperin, F., Röttgering, H., Van Weeren, R., Cassano, R.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Oxford University Press 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74157
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author Bonafede, A.
Intema, Hubertus
Brüggen, M.
Vazza, F.
Basu, K.
Sommer, M.
Ebeling, H.
De Gasperin, F.
Röttgering, H.
Van Weeren, R.
Cassano, R.
author_facet Bonafede, A.
Intema, Hubertus
Brüggen, M.
Vazza, F.
Basu, K.
Sommer, M.
Ebeling, H.
De Gasperin, F.
Röttgering, H.
Van Weeren, R.
Cassano, R.
author_sort Bonafede, A.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Radio haloes are synchrotron radio sources detected in some massive galaxy clusters. Their size of Mpc indicates that (re)acceleration processes are taking place in the host cluster. X-ray catalogues of galaxy clusters have been used in the past to search for radio haloes and to understand their connection with cluster-cluster mergers and with the thermal component of the intracluster medium. More recently, the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect has been proven to be a better route to search for massive clusters in a wider redshift range. With the aim of discovering new radio haloes and understanding their connection with cluster-cluster mergers, we have selected themostmassive clusters from the Planck early source catalogue and we have observed with the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope at 323 MHz those objects for which deep observations were not available. We have discovered new peculiar radio emission in three of the observed clusters, finding (i) a radio halo in the cluster RXCJ0949.8+1708, (ii) extended emission in Abell 1443 that we classify as a radio halo plus a radio relic, with a bright filament embedded in the radio halo, and (iii) low-power radio emission in CIZA J1938.3+5409 that is ten times below the radio-X-ray correlation and represents the first direct detection of the radio emission in the 'upper-limit' region of the radio-X-ray diagram. We discuss the properties of these new radio haloes in the framework of theoretical models for the radio emission.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
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publishDate 2015
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-741572019-03-13T03:36:47Z Radio haloes in Sunyaev-Zel'dovich-selected clusters of galaxies: The making of a halo? Bonafede, A. Intema, Hubertus Brüggen, M. Vazza, F. Basu, K. Sommer, M. Ebeling, H. De Gasperin, F. Röttgering, H. Van Weeren, R. Cassano, R. Radio haloes are synchrotron radio sources detected in some massive galaxy clusters. Their size of Mpc indicates that (re)acceleration processes are taking place in the host cluster. X-ray catalogues of galaxy clusters have been used in the past to search for radio haloes and to understand their connection with cluster-cluster mergers and with the thermal component of the intracluster medium. More recently, the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect has been proven to be a better route to search for massive clusters in a wider redshift range. With the aim of discovering new radio haloes and understanding their connection with cluster-cluster mergers, we have selected themostmassive clusters from the Planck early source catalogue and we have observed with the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope at 323 MHz those objects for which deep observations were not available. We have discovered new peculiar radio emission in three of the observed clusters, finding (i) a radio halo in the cluster RXCJ0949.8+1708, (ii) extended emission in Abell 1443 that we classify as a radio halo plus a radio relic, with a bright filament embedded in the radio halo, and (iii) low-power radio emission in CIZA J1938.3+5409 that is ten times below the radio-X-ray correlation and represents the first direct detection of the radio emission in the 'upper-limit' region of the radio-X-ray diagram. We discuss the properties of these new radio haloes in the framework of theoretical models for the radio emission. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74157 10.1093/mnras/stv2065 Oxford University Press fulltext
spellingShingle Bonafede, A.
Intema, Hubertus
Brüggen, M.
Vazza, F.
Basu, K.
Sommer, M.
Ebeling, H.
De Gasperin, F.
Röttgering, H.
Van Weeren, R.
Cassano, R.
Radio haloes in Sunyaev-Zel'dovich-selected clusters of galaxies: The making of a halo?
title Radio haloes in Sunyaev-Zel'dovich-selected clusters of galaxies: The making of a halo?
title_full Radio haloes in Sunyaev-Zel'dovich-selected clusters of galaxies: The making of a halo?
title_fullStr Radio haloes in Sunyaev-Zel'dovich-selected clusters of galaxies: The making of a halo?
title_full_unstemmed Radio haloes in Sunyaev-Zel'dovich-selected clusters of galaxies: The making of a halo?
title_short Radio haloes in Sunyaev-Zel'dovich-selected clusters of galaxies: The making of a halo?
title_sort radio haloes in sunyaev-zel'dovich-selected clusters of galaxies: the making of a halo?
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74157