XMM-Newton observation of the most X-ray-luminous galaxy cluster RX J1347.5-1145
Abstract
We report on an XMM-Newton observation of RX J1347.5-1145 (z=0.451), the most luminous X-ray cluster of galaxies currently known, with a luminosity LX = 6.0 0.1 × 1045 erg/s in the [2-10] keV energy band. We present the first temperature map of this cluster, which shows a complex structure. It identifies the cool core and a hot region at radii 50-200 kpc to south-east of the main X-ray peak, at a position consistent with the subclump seen in the X-ray image. This structure is probably an indication of a submerger event. Excluding the data of the south-east quadrant, the cluster appears relatively relaxed and we estimate a total mass within 1.7 Mpc of 2.0 0.4 × 1015 Msun. We find that the overall temperature of the cluster is kT=10.0 0.3 keV. The temperature profile shows a decline in the outer regios and a drop in the centre, indicating the presence of a cooling core which can be modelled by a cooling flow model with a minimum temperature ~2 keV and a very high mass accretion rate, M ~ 1900 Msun/yr. We compare our results with previous observations from ROSAT, ASCA and Chandra.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.