Ancient cosmic ray halos from the central galaxy boost Perseus's cool core via inverse-Compton scattering, simultaneously explaining radio minihalo, giant halo, X-ray properties, and gamma-ray data without re-acceleration.
Title resolution pending
2 Pith papers cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
2
Pith papers citing it
fields
astro-ph.HE 2years
2026 2verdicts
UNVERDICTED 2representative citing papers
XRISM measurements indicate turbulent dissipation from jets struggles to balance cooling in cluster atmospheres except possibly in limited inner regions of systems like Hydra A.
citing papers explorer
-
An Inverse-Compton-Boosted Cool Core Unifies Perseus's Radio and X-ray Halos
Ancient cosmic ray halos from the central galaxy boost Perseus's cool core via inverse-Compton scattering, simultaneously explaining radio minihalo, giant halo, X-ray properties, and gamma-ray data without re-acceleration.
-
Are X-ray Atmospheres Heated by Turbulent Dissipation? XRISM Constraints
XRISM measurements indicate turbulent dissipation from jets struggles to balance cooling in cluster atmospheres except possibly in limited inner regions of systems like Hydra A.