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The steep spectrum radio source VLSSJ2217.5+5943 shows a complex, filamentary morphology and a curved spectrum. Therefore, the source has previously been classified as a radio phoenix. However, no galaxy cluster associated with this radio source has been confidently detected so far because the source is located in the direction of the innermost zone of the Galactic Plane at b = +2.4 degr (innermost Zone of Avoidance, ZoA). We analysed archival observations in the near infrared (UKIDSS) and mid infrared (Spitzer) to select the galaxies in the immediate neighbourhood of the radio source. A sample of 23 galaxies was selected as candidate cluster members. Furthermore, we carried out deep integral field spectroscopy covering 6450 to 10500 AA with the red unit of the Hobby-Eberly Telescope second generation low resolution spectrograph (LRS2-R). We also reanalysed archival GMRT observations at 325 and 610 MHz. We selected 23 galaxies within a radius of 2.5 arcmin, centered on RA=22:17.5, DEC=+59:43 (J2000). Spectra were obtained for three of the brightest galaxies. For two galaxies we derived redshifts of z = 0.165 and z = 0.161, based on NaD absorption and TiO band heads. Their spectra correspond to E-type galaxies. Both galaxies are spatially associated with VLSSJ2217.5+5943. The spectrum of the third galaxy, which is slightly more distant from the radio source, indicates a LINER at z = 0.042. It is apparently a foreground galaxy with respect to the cluster we identified. VLSSJ2217.5+5943 is associated with a massive galaxy cluster at redshift z = 0.163 +- .003, supporting its classification as radio phoenix.
We report the discovery of extended radio emission in the Phoenix cluster (SPT-CL J2344-4243, z=0.596) with the GMRT at 610 MHz. The diffuse emission extends over a region of at least 400-500 kpc and surrounds the central radio source of the Brightes
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We report the results of the Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) 15 mm observation of the Phoenix galaxy cluster possessing an extreme star-burst brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) at the cluster center. We spatially resolved radio emission around t
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