Abstract
Early-type galaxies often contain a hot X-ray-emitting interstellar medium [(3-8) × 106 K] with an apparent radiative cooling time much less than a Hubble time. If unopposed by a heating mechanism, the gas will radiatively cool to temperatures 104 K at a rate proportional to LX/TX, typically 0.03-1 M☉ yr-1. We can test whether gas is cooling through the 3 × 105 K range by observing the O VI doublet, whose luminosity is proportional to the cooling rate. Here we report on a study of an unbiased sample of 24 galaxies, obtaining Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer spectra to complement the X-ray data of ROSAT and Chandra. The O VI line emission was detected in about 40% of the galaxies and at a luminosity level similar to the prediction from the cooling flow model. There is a correlation between and X, although there is significant dispersion about the relationship, where the O VI is brighter or dimmer than expected by a factor of 3 or more. If the cooling flow picture is to be retained, then this dispersion requires that cooling flows be time-dependent, as might occur by the activity of an AGN. However, of detected objects, those with the highest or lowest values of /X are not systematically hot or cool, as one might predict from AGN heating.
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