13 research outputs found
The effect of radiative cooling on scaling laws of X-ray groups and clusters
We have performed cosmological simulations in a ÎCDM cosmology with and without radiative cooling in order to study the effect of cooling on the cluster scaling laws. Our simulations consist of 4.1 million particles each of gas and dark matter within a box size of 100 h-1 Mpc, and the run with cooling is the largest of its kind to have been evolved to z = 0. Our cluster catalogs both consist of over 400 objects and are complete in mass down to ~1013 h-1 Mâ. We contrast the emission-weighted temperature-mass (Tew-M) and bolometric luminosity-temperature (Lbol-Tew) relations for the simulations at z = 0. We find that radiative cooling increases the temperature of intracluster gas and decreases its total luminosity, in agreement with the results of Pearce et al. Furthermore, the temperature dependence of these effects flattens the slope of the Tew-M relation and steepens the slope of the Lbol-Tew relation. Inclusion of radiative cooling in the simulations is sufficient to reproduce the observed X-ray scaling relations without requiring excessive nongravitational energy injection
Simulating the Hot X-ray Emitting Gas in Elliptical Galaxies
We study the chemo-dynamical evolution of elliptical galaxies and their hot
X-ray emitting gas using high-resolution cosmological simulations. Our Tree
N-body/SPH code includes a self-consistent treatment of radiative cooling, star
formation, supernovae feedback, and chemical enrichment. We present a series of
LCDM cosmological simulations which trace the spatial and temporal evolution of
heavy element abundance patterns in both the stellar and gas components of
galaxies. X-ray spectra of the hot gas are constructed via the use of the
vmekal plasma model, and analysed using XSPEC with the XMM EPN response
function. Simulation end-products are quantitatively compared with the
observational data in both the X-ray and optical regime. We find that radiative
cooling is important to interpret the observed X-ray luminosity, temperature,
and metallicity of the interstellar medium of elliptical galaxies. However,
this cooled gas also leads to excessive star formation at low redshift, and
therefore results in underlying galactic stellar populations which are too blue
with respect to observations.Comment: 6 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of "The IGM/Galaxy
Connection - The Distribution of Baryons at z=0", ed. M. Putman & J.
Rosenberg; High resolution version is available at
http://astronomy.swin.edu.au/staff/dkawata/research/papers.htm
Heating and enriching the intracluster medium
We present numerical simulations of galaxy clusters with stochastic heating
from active galactic nuclei (AGN) that are able to reproduce the observed
entropy and temperature profiles of non-cool-core (NCC) clusters. Our study
uses N-body hydrodynamical simulations to investigate how star formation, metal
production, black hole accretion and the associated feedback from supernovae
and AGN heat and enrich diffuse gas in galaxy clusters. We assess how different
implementations of these processes affect the thermal and chemical properties
of the intracluster medium (ICM), using high-quality X-ray observations of
local clusters to constrain our models. For the purposes of this study we have
resimulated a sample of 25 massive galaxy clusters extracted from the
Millennium Simulation. Sub-grid physics is handled using a semi-analytic model
of galaxy formation, thus guaranteeing that the source of feedback in our
simulations is a population of galaxies with realistic properties. We find that
supernova feedback has no effect on the entropy and metallicity structure of
the ICM, regardless of the method used to inject energy and metals into the
diffuse gas. By including AGN feedback, we are able to explain the observed
entropy and metallicity profiles of clusters, as well as the X-ray
luminosity-temperature scaling relation for NCC systems. A stochastic model of
AGN energy injection motivated by anisotropic jet heating - presented for the
first time here - is crucial for this success. With the addition of
metal-dependent radiative cooling, our model is also able to produce CC
clusters, without overcooling of gas in dense, central regions.Comment: 23 pages, accepted by MNRAS. Some changes in response to referee's
comments. New figures 22 & 2
The evolution of galaxy cluster X-ray scaling relations
We use numerical simulations to investigate, for the first time, the joint
effect of feedback from supernovae (SNe) and active galactic nuclei (AGN) on
the evolution of galaxy cluster X-ray scaling relations. Our simulations are
drawn from the Millennium Gas Project and are some of the largest
hydrodynamical N-body simulations ever carried out. Feedback is implemented
using a hybrid scheme, where the energy input into intracluster gas by SNe and
AGN is taken from a semi-analytic model of galaxy formation. This ensures that
the source of feedback is a population of galaxies that closely resembles that
found in the real universe. We show that our feedback model is capable of
reproducing observed local X-ray scaling laws, at least for non-cool core
clusters, but that almost identical results can be obtained with a simplistic
preheating model. However, we demonstrate that the two models predict opposing
evolutionary behaviour. We have examined whether the evolution predicted by our
feedback model is compatible with observations of high-redshift clusters.
Broadly speaking, we find that the data seems to favour the feedback model for
z<0.5, and the preheating model at higher redshift. However, a statistically
meaningful comparison with observations is impossible, because the large
samples of high-redshift clusters currently available are prone to strong
selection biases. As the observational picture becomes clearer in the near
future, it should be possible to place tight constraints on the evolution of
the scaling laws, providing us with an invaluable probe of the physical
processes operating in galaxy clusters.Comment: 23 pages, 14 figures, 3 tables. Minor revisons in line with referee's
comments. Published in MNRA