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XMM-Newton Spectroscopy of the Cluster of Galaxies 2a 0335+096
Author(s) -
Norbert Werner,
J. de Plaa,
J.S. Kaastra,
Jacco Vink,
J. A. M. Bleeker,
Takayuki Tamura,
J. R. Peterson,
F. Verbunt
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
osti oai (u.s. department of energy office of scientific and technical information)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/878003
Subject(s) - astrophysics , physics , supernova , cluster (spacecraft) , surface brightness , galaxy , stars , galaxy cluster , cold front , core (optical fiber) , spectroscopy , approx , abundance (ecology) , astronomy , atmospheric sciences , fishery , computer science , optics , biology , programming language , operating system
We present here the results of a deep (130 ks) XMM-Newton observation of the cluster of galaxies 2A 0335+096. The deep exposure allows us to study in detail its temperature structure and its elemental abundances. We fit three different thermal models and find that the multi-temperature wdem model fits our data best. We find that the abundance structure of the cluster is consistent with a scenario where the relative number of Type Ia supernovae contributing to the enrichment of the intra-cluster medium is {approx}25%, while the relative number of core collapse supernovae is {approx}75%. Comparison of the observed abundances to the supernova yields does not allow us to put any constrains on the contribution of Pop III stars to the enrichment of the ICM. Radial abundance profiles show a strong central peak of both Type Ia and core collapse supernova products. Both the temperature and iron abundance maps show an asymmetry in the direction of the elongated morphology of the surface brightness. In particular the temperature map shows a sharp change over a brightness edge on the southern side of the core, which was identified as a cold front in the Chandra data. This suggests that the cluster is in the process of a merger with a subcluster. Moreover, we find that the blobs or filaments discovered in the core of the cluster by Chandra are, contrary to the previous results, colder than the ambient gas and they appear to be in pressure equilibrium with their environment

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