We present spectral analysis results of deeper (270 ks) NuSTAR observations of the merging galaxy cluster system, ZWCL1856.8+6616, at redshift z=0.304, following a pilot study using shallower (30 ks) NuSTAR data (Tumer et al. 2024). The cluster hosts a double radio relic, pointing to a similar mass head-on collision at/near the plane of sky. We aim to find the relation between radio and X-ray shock features. Using data from both focal plane modules of NuSTAR, we study the temperature structure across the field of view and report on the X-ray detected shock strength at the relic sites. We generate nominal and cross-ARFs with nucrossarf to disentangle photon cross-contamination within regions of interest due to the moderate point spread function of NuSTAR. Here we report one of the strongest X-ray detected shocks in a galaxy cluster merger with M=3.90(+1.64,-0.85) at the Northern relic site, that is unprecedentedly larger than the radio counterpart; M=2.5+/-0.2 (Jones et al. 2021a), and we report Southern shock strength as M=2.36(+0.58,-0.46). We argue that since the Northern relic (or radio shock), is confined in a very small region in the sky, particle acceleration is more efficient and is likely to grow in the post-shock regions. In addition, we search for inverse Compton (IC) emission at the radio relic sites; however, an IC component was not detected.
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Tümer et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d893eb6c1944d70ce04ef3 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.13016/m2kxvy-wrym
Ay?egü Tümer
Christian T. Norseth
Daniel R. Wik
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