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A&A 454, 437-445 (2006)
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20054745
Cold molecular gas in the Perseus cluster core
Association with X-ray cavity, H
filaments and cooling flow
P. Salomé1, F. Combes2, A. C. Edge3, C. Crawford4, M. Erlund4, A. C. Fabian4, N. A. Hatch4, R. M. Johnstone4, J. S. Sanders4 and R. J. Wilman3 1 Institut de Radioastronomie Millimétrique, 300 rue de la Piscine, 38406 St. Martin d'Hères, France
e-mail: salome@iram.fr
2 Observatoire de Paris, LERMA, 61 Av. de l'Observatoire, 75014 Paris, France
e-mail: francoise.combes@obspm.fr
3 Department of Physics, University of Durham, South Road, Durham DH1 3LE, UK
e-mail: alastair.edge@durham.ac.uk
4 Institute of Astronomy, Madingley Road, Cambridge CB3 OHA, UK
(Received 21 December 2005 / Accepted 15 February 2006)
Abstract
Cold molecular gas has recently been detected in several
cooling flow clusters of galaxies containing huge optical nebula.
These optical filaments are tightly linked to cooling flows and
related phenomena, such as rising bubbles of relativistic plasma
fed by radio jets. We present here a map, in the CO(2-1)
rotational line, of the cold molecular gas associated with some
of the H
filaments surrounding the central galaxy of the
Perseus cluster: NGC 1275. The map, extending to about 50 kpc
(135 arcsec) from the center of the galaxy, has been made with
the 18-receiver array HERA at the focus of the IRAM 30 m
telescope. Although most of the cold gas is concentrated to the
center of the galaxy, the CO emission is also clearly associated
with the extended filaments conspicuous in ionised gas, and could
trace a possible reservoir fueling the star formation there.
Some of the CO emission is also found where the X-ray gas could
cool down more efficiently at the rims of the central X-ray
cavities (where the hot gas is thought to have been pushed out
and compressed by the expanding radio lobes of the central AGN).
The CO global kinematics do not show any rotation in NGC 1275.
The cold gas is probably a mixture of gas falling down on the
central galaxy and of uplifted gas dragged out by a rising bubble
in the intracluster medium. As recently suggested in other
cluster cores, the cold gas peculiar morphology and kinematics
argue for the picture of an intermittent cooling flow scenario
where the central AGN plays an important role.
Key words: galaxies: cooling flows -- intergalactic medium -- galaxies: clusters: individual: NGC 1275 -- galaxies: elliptical and lenticular, cD
© ESO 2006



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