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Chandra Observation of the Central Region of the Cooling Flow Cluster A262: A Radio Source That Is a Shadow of Its Former Self?

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© 2004. The American Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A.
, , Citation Elizabeth L. Blanton et al 2004 ApJ 612 817 DOI 10.1086/422677

0004-637X/612/2/817

Abstract

We present a Chandra observation of the cooling flow cluster A262. Spectral fits show that the intracluster medium (ICM) in A262 cools by a factor of 3, from 2.7 to 0.9 keV, at the cluster center. A mass deposition rate of = 19 M yr-1 is measured. Complex structure is found in the very inner regions of the cluster, including knots of emission and a clear deficit of emission to the east of the cluster center. The bright X-ray structures are located in the same regions as optical line emission, indicating that cooling to low temperatures has occurred in these regions. The X-ray deficit is spatially coincident with the eastern radio lobe associated with the active galactic nucleus hosted by the central cD galaxy. The region surrounding the X-ray hole is cool and shows no evidence that it has been strongly shocked. This joins the ranks of other cooling flow clusters with Chandra-detected bubbles blown by central radio sources. This source is different from the other well-known cases, in that the radio source is orders of magnitude less luminous and has produced a much smaller bubble. Comparing the energy output of the radio source with the luminosity of the cooling gas shows that energy transferred to the ICM from the radio source is insufficient to offset the cooling flow unless the radio source is currently experiencing a less powerful than average outburst and was more powerful in the past.

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10.1086/422677