82 research outputs found
Cold fronts: probes of plasma astrophysics in galaxy clusters
The most massive baryonic component of galaxy clusters is the “intracluster medium” (ICM), a diffuse, hot, weakly magnetized plasma that is most easily observed in the X-ray band. Despite being observed for decades, the macroscopic transport properties of the ICM are still not well-constrained. A path to determine macroscopic ICM properties opened up with the discovery of “cold fronts”. These were observed as sharp discontinuities in surface brightness and temperature in the ICM, with the property that the denser side of the discontinuity is the colder one. The high spatial resolution of the Chandra X-ray Observatory revealed two puzzles about cold fronts. First, they should be subject to Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities, yet in many cases they appear relatively smooth and undisturbed. Second, the width of the interface between the two gas phases is typically narrower than the mean free path of the particles in the plasma, indicating negligible thermal conduction. It was thus realized that these special characteristics of cold fronts may be used to probe the properties of the cluster plasma. In this review, we will discuss the recent simulations of cold fronts in galaxy clusters, focusing on those which have attempted to use these features to constrain ICM physics. In particular, we will examine the effects of magnetic fields, viscosity, and thermal conductivity on the stability properties and long-term evolution of cold fronts. We conclude with a discussion on what important questions remain unanswered, and the future role of simulations and the next generation of X-ray observatories
Sloshing of Galaxy Cluster Core Plasma in the Presence of Self-Interacting Dark Matter
The "sloshing" of the cold gas in the cores of relaxed clusters of galaxies
is a widespread phenomenon, evidenced by the presence of spiral-shaped "cold
fronts" in X-ray observations of these systems. In simulations, these flows of
cold gas readily form by interactions of the cluster core with small
subclusters, due to a separation of the cold gas from the dark matter (DM), due
to their markedly different collisionalities. In this work, we use numerical
simulations to investigate the effects of increasing the DM collisionality on
sloshing cold fronts in a cool-core cluster. For clusters in isolation, the
formation of a flat DM core via self-interactions results in modest adiabatic
expansion and cooling of the core gas. In merger simulations, cold fronts form
in the same manner as in previous simulations, but the flattened potential in
the core region enables the gas to expand to larger radii in the initial
stages. Upon infall, the subcluster's DM mass decreases via collisions,
reducing its influence on the core. Thus, the sloshing gas moves slower,
inhibiting the growth of fluid instabilities relative to simulations where the
DM cross section is zero. This also inhibits turbulent mixing and the increase
in entropy that would otherwise result. For values of the cross section
, subclusters do not survive as self-gravitating structures for
more than two core passages. Additionally, separations between the peaks in the
X-ray emissivity and thermal Sunyaev-Zeldovich effect signals during sloshing
may place constraints on DM self-interactions.Comment: 20 pages, 14 figures, submitted to Ap
Mapping the particle acceleration in the cool core of the galaxy cluster RX J1720.1+2638
We present new deep, high-resolution radio images of the diffuse minihalo in
the cool core of the galaxy cluster RX J1720.1+2638. The images have been
obtained with the Giant Metrewave Radio Telescope at 317, 617 and 1280 MHz and
with the Very Large Array at 1.5, 4.9 and 8.4 GHz, with angular resolutions
ranging from 1" to 10". This represents the best radio spectral and imaging
dataset for any minihalo. Most of the radio flux of the minihalo arises from a
bright central component with a maximum radius of ~80 kpc. A fainter tail of
emission extends out from the central component to form a spiral-shaped
structure with a length of ~230 kpc, seen at frequencies 1.5 GHz and below. We
find indication of a possible steepening of the total radio spectrum of the
minihalo at high frequencies. Furthermore, a spectral index image shows that
the spectrum of the diffuse emission steepens with the increasing distance
along the tail. A striking spatial correlation is observed between the minihalo
emission and two cold fronts visible in the Chandra X-ray image of this cool
core. These cold fronts confine the minihalo, as also seen in numerical
simulations of minihalo formation by sloshing-induced turbulence. All these
observations favor the hypothesis that the radio emitting electrons in cluster
cool cores are produced by turbulent reacceleration.Comment: 16 pages, 11 figures, accepted for publication in The Astrophysical
Journa
Painting baryons onto N-body simulations of galaxy clusters with image-to-image deep learning
Galaxy cluster mass functions are a function of cosmology, but mass is not a
direct observable, and systematic errors abound in all its observable proxies.
Mass-free inference can bypass this challenge, but it requires large suites of
simulations spanning a range of cosmologies and models for directly observable
quantities. In this work, we devise a U-net - an image-to-image machine
learning algorithm - to ``paint'' the IllustrisTNG model of baryons onto
dark-matter-only simulations of galaxy clusters. Using 761 galaxy clusters with
from the TNG-300 simulation at , we
train the algorithm to read in maps of projected dark matter mass and output
maps of projected gas density, temperature, and X-ray flux. The models train in
under an hour on two GPUs, and then predict baryonic images for dark
matter maps drawn from the TNG-300 dark-matter-only (DMO) simulation in under
two minutes. Despite being trained on individual images, the model reproduces
the true scaling relation and scatter for the , as well as the
distribution functions of the cluster X-ray luminosity and gas mass. For just
one decade in cluster mass, the model reproduces three orders of magnitude in
. The model is biased slightly high when using dark matter maps from the
DMO simulation. The model performs well on inputs from TNG-300-2, whose mass
resolution is 8 times coarser; further degrading the resolution biases the
predicted luminosity function high. We conclude that U-net-based baryon
painting is a promising technique to build large simulated cluster catalogs
which can be used to improve cluster cosmology by combining existing
full-physics and large -body simulations.Comment: Accepted to MNRA
Sloshing Gas in the Core of the Most Luminous Galaxy Cluster RXJ1347.5-1145
We present new constraints on the merger history of the most X-ray luminous
cluster of galaxies, RXJ1347.5-1145, based its unique multiwavelength
morphology. Our X-ray analysis confirms the core gas is undergoing "sloshing"
resulting from a prior, large scale, gravitational perturbation. In combination
with extensive multiwavelength observations, the sloshing gas points to the
primary and secondary clusters having had at least two prior strong
gravitational interactions. The evidence supports a model in which the
secondary subcluster with mass M=4.8 10 M has
previously (0.6 Gyr ago) passed by the primary cluster, and has now
returned for a subsequent crossing where the subcluster's gas has been
completely stripped from its dark matter halo. RXJ1347 is a prime example of
how core gas sloshing may be used to constrain the merger histories of galaxy
clusters through multiwavelength analyses.Comment: 17 pages, 5 figures; higher resolution figures available in online
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