A MeerKAT View on Galaxy Clusters
G. Bernardi*,
T. Venturi,
R. Cassano,
G. Brunetti,
D. Dallacasa,
B. Fanaroff,
B. Hugo,
S. Makhatini,
N. Oozeer,
O. Smirnov and
J. Zwart*: corresponding author
Published on:
February 01, 2018
Abstract
Almost two decades of observations of radio emission in galaxy clusters have proven the existence of relativistic particles and magnetic fields that generate extended synchrotron emission in the form of radio halos. In the current scenario, radio halos are generated through reacceleration of relativistic electrons by turbulence generated by cluster mergers. Although this theoretical framework has received increasingly supporting observational evidence over the last ten years, observations of statistically complete samples are needed in order to fundamentally test model predictions. In this paper we briefly review our 7--element Karoo Radio Telescope observations of a sample of nearby clusters aimed to test the predictions of the turbulent reacceleration model in small systems ($M_{500} > 4 \times 10^{14}$~M$_{\odot}$). We conclude by presenting two galaxy cluster surveys to be carried out with MeerKAT in order to provide crucial test of models of radio halo formation in nearby ($z < 0.1$) and high redshift ($z > 0.4$) systems respectively.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22323/1.277.0031
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