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We revisit the XMM-Newton observation of M87 focusing our attention on the temperature structure. We find that spectra for most regions of M87 can be adequately fit by single temperature models. Only in a few regions, which are cospatial with the E and SW radio arms, we find evidence of a second temperature. The cooler component (kT ~ 0.8-1 keV) fills a small volume compared to the hotter component (kT ~ 1.6-2.5 keV), it is confined to the radio arms rather than being associated with the potential well of the central cD and is probably structured in blobs with typical sizes smaller than a few 100 pc. Thermal conduction must be suppressed for the cool blobs to survive in the hotter ambient gas. Since the cool gas is observed only in those regions of M87 where we have evidence of radio halos our results favor models in which magnetic fields play a role in suppressing heat conduction. The entropy of the cool blobs is in general smaller than that of the hot phase gas thus cool blobs cannot originate from adiabatic evolution of hot phase gas entrained by buoyant radio bubbles, as suggested by Churazov et al. (2001). An exploration of alternative origins for the cool gas leads to unsatisfactory results.
We report the results of a detailed analysis of the temperature structure of the X-ray emitting plasma halo of M~87, the cD galaxy of the Virgo Cluster. Using the MEKAL model, the data provide strong indications that the intracluster medium has a sin
We present axisymmetric two-temperature general relativistic radiation magnetohydrodynamic (GRRMHD) simulations of the inner region of the accretion flow onto the supermassive black hole M87. We address uncertainties from previous modeling efforts th
Recently, Shara and collaborators searched for novae in M87 in a series of images originally acquired in HST program #10543 (PI: Baltz), finding a surprisingly high nova rate of $363_{-45}^{+33}$ per year. In an attempt to reconcile this rate with pr
We report new results from a sub-parsec scale study of the inner jet in M87 performed at 15 GHz with the Very Long Baseline Array. We have detected a limb brightened structure of the jet along with a faint 3 mas long counter-feature which we also fin
To obtain a better understanding of the location and mechanisms for the production of the gamma-ray emission in jets of AGN we present a detailed study of the HST-1 structure, 0.8 arcsec downstream the jet of M87, previously identified as a possible