5 years ago

What Do the Hitomi Observations Tell Us About the Turbulent Velocities in the Perseus Cluster? Probing the Velocity Field with Mock Observations

Hitomi made the first direct measurements of galaxy cluster gas motions in the Perseus cluster, which implied that its core is fairly “quiescent,” with velocities less than ∼200 km s −1 , despite the presence of an active galactic nucleus and sloshing cold fronts. Building on previous work, we use synthetic Hitomi /X-ray Spectrometer (SXS) observations of the hot plasma of a simulated cluster with sloshing gas motions and varying viscosity to analyze its velocity structure in a similar fashion. We find that sloshing motions can produce line shifts and widths similar to those measured by Hitomi . We find these measurements are unaffected by the value of the gas viscosity, since its effects are only manifested clearly on angular scales smaller than the SXS ∼1′ PSF. The PSF biases the line shift of regions near the core as much as ∼40–50 km s −1 , so it is crucial to model this effect carefully. We also infer that if sloshing motions dominate t...

Publisher URL: http://iopscience.iop.org/0004-637X/853/2/180

DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/aaa4b3

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