Triggering nuclear and galaxy activity in the Bullet cluster
Abstract
The analysis of the cluster environment is a valuable instrument to investigate the origin of AGN and star-forming galaxies gas fuelling and trigger mechanisms. To this purpose, we present a detailed analysis of the point-like X-ray sources in the Bullet cluster field. Thanks to 600 ks Chandra observations, we produced a catalogue of 381 X-ray point sources up to a distance of 1.5 virial radius and with flux limits 1×10-16 and 8×10-16 erg cm-2 s-1 in the 0.5-2 keV and 2-10 keV bands, respectively. We found a strong (up to a factor 1.5-2) and significant (4σ) over-density in the full region studied 0.3R200<R<1.5R200. We identified optical and infrared counterparts for 84% and 48% of the X-ray sources, respectively. We obtained new spectroscopic redshifts for 106 X-ray sources. Spectroscopic and photometric redshifts of optical and infrared sources have been also collected, and these sources were used as ancillary samples. We find that the over-density in the region 0.3R200<R<R200 is likely due to X-ray AGN (mostly obscured) and star-forming galaxies both associated to the cluster, while in the more external region it is likely mostly due to background AGN. The fraction of cluster galaxies hosting an X-ray detected AGN is 1.00.4\%, nearly constant with the radius, a fraction similar to that reported in other clusters of galaxies at similar redshift. The fraction of X-ray bright AGN (L2-10keV>1043 ergs s-1) in the region 0.3R200<R<R200 is 0.5+0.6-0.2\%, higher than that in other clusters at similar redshift and more similar to the AGN fraction in the field. Finally, the spatial distributions of AGN and star-forming galaxies, selected also thanks to their infrared emission, appear similar, thus suggesting that both are triggered by the same mechanism.
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