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      The Cheshire Cat Gravitational Lens: The Formation of a Massive Fossil Group

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          Abstract

          The Cheshire Cat is a relatively poor group of galaxies dominated by two luminous elliptical galaxies surrounded by at least four arcs from gravitationally lensed background galaxies that give the system a humorous appearance. Our combined optical/X-ray study of this system reveals that it is experiencing a line of sight merger between two groups with a roughly equal mass ratio with a relative velocity of ~1350 km/s. One group was most likely a low-mass fossil group, while the other group would have almost fit the classical definition of a fossil group. The collision manifests itself in a bimodal galaxy velocity distribution, an elevated central X-ray temperature and luminosity indicative of a shock, and gravitational arc centers that do not coincide with either large elliptical galaxy. One of the luminous elliptical galaxies has a double nucleus embedded off-center in the stellar halo. The luminous ellipticals should merge in less than a Gyr, after which observers will see a massive 1.2-1.5 x 10^14 solar mass fossil group with an M_r = -24.0 brightest group galaxy at its center. Thus, the Cheshire Cat offers us the first opportunity to study a fossil group progenitor. We discuss the limitations of the classical definition of a fossil group in terms of magnitude gaps between the member galaxies. We also suggest that if the merging of fossil (or near-fossil) groups is a common avenue for creating present-day fossil groups, the time lag between the final galactic merging of the system and the onset of cooling in the shock-heated core could account for the observed lack of well-developed cool cores in some fossil groups.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          2015-05-19
          Article
          1505.05501
          f12621de-b498-4800-aff6-df538c5dac59

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

          History
          Custom metadata
          15 pages, 7 figures -- accepted by Astrophysical Journal
          astro-ph.GA astro-ph.CO astro-ph.HE

          Cosmology & Extragalactic astrophysics,Galaxy astrophysics,High energy astrophysical phenomena

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