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On The Soft X-Ray Spectrum Of Cooling Flows, A C. Fabian, R F. Mushotzky, Paul E. J Nulsen, J R. Peterson
On The Soft X-Ray Spectrum Of Cooling Flows, A C. Fabian, R F. Mushotzky, Paul E. J Nulsen, J R. Peterson
Faculty of Engineering and Information Sciences - Papers: Part A
Strong evidence for cooling flows has been found in low-resolution X-ray imaging and spectra of many clusters of galaxies. However, high-resolution X-ray spectra of several clusters from the Reflection Grating Spectrometer on XMM-Newton now show a soft X-ray spectrum inconsistent with a simple cooling flow. The main problem is a lack of the emission lines expected from gas cooling below 1–2 keV. Lines from gas at about 2–3 keV are observed, even in a high-temperature cluster such as A1835, indicating that gas is cooling down to about 2–3 keV, but is not found at lower temperatures. Here we discuss several …
Asca And Rosat Observations Of Nearby Cluster Cooling Flows, S W. Allen, A C. Fabian, R M. Johnstone, K A. Arnaud, Paul E J Nulsen
Asca And Rosat Observations Of Nearby Cluster Cooling Flows, S W. Allen, A C. Fabian, R M. Johnstone, K A. Arnaud, Paul E J Nulsen
Faculty of Engineering and Information Sciences - Papers: Part A
We present a detailed analysis of the X-ray properties of the cooling flows in a sample of nearby, X-ray-bright clusters of galaxies using high-quality ASCA spectra and ROSAT X-ray images. We demonstrate the need for multiphase models to consistently explain the spectral and imaging X-ray data for the clusters. The mass deposition rates of the cooling flows, independently determined from the ASCA spectra and ROSAT images, exhibit reasonable agreement. We confirm the presence of intrinsic X-ray absorption in the clusters using a variety of spectral models. We also report detections of 100-μm infrared emission, spatially coincident with the cooling flows, …