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      A multiwavelength view of the galaxy cluster Abell 523 and its peculiar diffuse radio source

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          Abstract

          We study the structure of the galaxy cluster Abell 523 (A523) at z=0.104 using new spectroscopic data for 132 galaxies acquired at the Telescopio Nazionale Galileo, new photometric data from the Isaac Newton Telescope, and X-ray and radio data from the Chandra and Very Large Array archives. We estimate the velocity dispersion of the galaxy population, sigmaV=949 km/s, and the X-ray temperature of the hot intracluster medium, kT=5.3 keV. We infer that A523 is a massive system: M200 about 7-9 x10E14 Msun. The analysis of the optical data confirms the presence of two subclusters, 0.75 Mpc apart, tracing the SSW-NNE direction and dominated by the two brightest cluster galaxies (BCG1 and BCG2). The X-ray surface brightness is strongly elongated towards the NNE direction, and its peak is clearly offset from both the BCGs. We confirm the presence of a 1.3 Mpc large radio halo, elongated in the ESE-WNW direction and perpendicular to the optical/X-ray elongation. We detect a significant radio/X-ray offset and radio polarization, two features which might be the result of a magnetic field energy spread on large spatial scales. A523 is found consistent with most scaling relations followed by clusters hosting radio haloes, but quite peculiar in the Pradio-LX relation: it is underluminous in the X-rays or overluminous in radio. A523 can be described as a binary head--on merger caught after a collision along the SSW-NNE direction. However, minor optical and radio features suggest a more complex cluster structure, with A523 forming at the crossing of two filaments along the SSW-NNE and ESE-WNW directions.

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          Cosmic Rays in Galaxy Clusters and Their Interaction with Magnetic Fields

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            Radio Relics in Clusters of Galaxies

            In this paper we review the observational results on Relic radio sources in clusters of galaxies. We discuss their observational properties, structures and radio spectra. We will show that Relics can be divided according to their size, morphology, and location in the galaxy cluster. These differences could be related to physical properties of Relic sources. The comparison with cluster conditions suggests that Relics could be related to shock waves originated by cluster mergers.
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              Author and article information

              Journal
              2015-10-20
              2015-12-24
              Article
              10.1093/mnras/stv2827
              1510.05951
              69ae0eab-6342-4ef7-822e-49e685f612d4

              http://arxiv.org/licenses/nonexclusive-distrib/1.0/

              History
              Custom metadata
              MNRAS accepted, 21 pages, 20 figures, language corrections and presentation of the data catalogue
              astro-ph.GA astro-ph.CO

              Cosmology & Extragalactic astrophysics,Galaxy astrophysics
              Cosmology & Extragalactic astrophysics, Galaxy astrophysics

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