X-ray emission from galaxies, groups and clusters

(Croston, Hardcastle, Goodger)

A1689b The majority of the baryonic matter in the Universe is in the form of hot, diffuse X-ray-emitting gas comprising the intergalactic medium in galaxy groups and clusters. X-ray-emitting hot gas is also an important component of the interstellar medium of elliptical galaxies. The thermal X-ray emission from galaxies, galaxy groups and clusters contains the signatures of important evolutionary processes such as mergers, the activity of active galactic nuclei (AGN), galaxy interactions and tidal stripping. As a tracer of the underlying dark matter distribution, the X-ray emission also provides a method of testing cosmological models of structure formation.

The impact of AGN activity on the hot, X-ray emitting gas in galaxies, groups and clusters is now understood to be one of the major uncertainties in our understanding our how the Universe has evolved to its present state. In particular, the outbursts from radio-loud AGN appear to be a crucial ingredient for models of galaxy evolution and of the co-evolution of galaxy bulges and black holes, as well as for understanding the observed properties of the intracluster medium. It is also essential that the effects of AGN outbursts on scaling relations between X-ray observables and cluster mass are understood in order to test structure formation models and to use galaxy clusters as cosmological probes.

The current generation of X-ray observatories (XMM-Newton and Chandra) has provided much of the evidence to support this emerging picture of an important feedback role for radio-loud AGN. Our work combines detailed X-ray imaging and spectroscopy with low-frequency radio imaging using the VLA, GMRT and ATCA to investigate the energy transfer mechanisms and feedback roles of different radio-loud AGN populations.

Current projects include: