Speaker
Description
In the current theoretic paradigm, high redshift radio halos are expected to be scarce due to inverse Compton energy losses and redshift
dimming, which cause them to be intrinsically faint. This low occurrence fraction is predicted by cosmic ray electron turbulent re-acceleration models. To date, only a handful of radio halos have been detected at redshift z > 0.8. We report the MeerKAT detection of a radio halo hosted by a galaxy cluster ACT-CL J0329.2-2330 at z = 1.23, making it the highest redshift halo detected thus far. Using L-band and UHF-band observations, we derive a radio halo spectral index of α = 1.3 ± 0.4 and a radio power of P_1.4 GHz = (4.4 ± 1.5) × 10^24 W Hz−1. This result further confirms that there is rapid magnetic field amplification in galaxy clusters at
high redshift.
Stream | Science |
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