No Arabic abstract
The rich galaxy cluster Abell 2204 exhibits edges in its X-ray surface brightness at $sim 65$ and $35 {rm~ kpc}$ west and east of its center, respectively. The presence of these edges, which were interpreted as sloshing cold fronts, implies that the intracluster medium was recently disturbed. We analyze the properties of the intracluster medium using multiple Chandra observations of Abell 2204. We find a density ratio $n_{rm in}/n_{rm out} = 2.05pm0.05$ and a temperature ratio $T_{rm out}/T_{rm in} = 1.91pm0.27$ (projected, or $1.87pm0.56$ deprojected) across the western edge, and correspondingly $n_{rm in}/n_{rm out} = 1.96pm0.05$ and $T_{rm out}/T_{rm in} =1.45pm0.15$ (projected, or $1.25pm0.26$ deprojected) across the eastern edge. These values are typical of cold fronts in galaxy clusters. This, together with the spiral pattern observed in the cluster core, supports the sloshing scenario for Abell 2204. No Kelvin-Helmholtz eddies are observed along the cold front surfaces, indicating that they are effectively suppressed by some physical mechanism. We argue that the suppression is likely facilitated by the magnetic fields amplified in the sloshing motion, and deduce from the measured gas properties that the magnetic field strength should be greater than $24pm6$ $mu$G and $32pm8$ $mu$G along the west and east cold fronts, respectively.
We present an analysis of a 72 ks Chandra observation of the double cluster Abell 1644 (z=0.047). The X-ray temperatures indicate the masses are M500=2.6+/-0.4 x10^{14} h^{-1} M_sun for the northern subcluster and M500=3.1+/-0.4 x10^{14} h^{-1} M_sun for the southern, main cluster. We identify a sharp edge in the radial X-ray surface brightness of the main cluster, which we find to be a cold front, with a jump in temperature of a factor of ~3. This edge possesses a spiral morphology characteristic of core gas sloshing around the cluster potential minimum. We present observational evidence, supported by hydrodynamic simulations, that the northern subcluster is the object which initiated the core gas sloshing in the main cluster at least 700 Myr ago. We discuss reheating of the main clusters core gas via two mechanisms brought about by the sloshing gas: first, the release of gravitational potential energy gained by the cores displacement from the potential minimum, and second, a dredging inwards of the outer, higher entropy cluster gas along finger-shaped streams. We find the available gravitational potential energy is small compared to the energy released by the cooling gas in the core.
X-ray observations of many clusters of galaxies reveal the presence of edges in surface brightness and temperature, known as cold fronts. In relaxed clusters with cool cores, these edges have been interpreted as evidence for the sloshing of the core gas in the clusters gravitational potential. The smoothness of these edges has been interpreted as evidence for the stabilizing effect of magnetic fields draped around the front surfaces. To check this hypothesis, we perform high-resolution magnetohydrodynamics simulations of magnetized gas sloshing in galaxy clusters initiated by encounters with subclusters. We go beyond previous works on the simulation of cold fronts in a magnetized intracluster medium by simulating their formation in realistic, idealized mergers with high resolution ({Delta}x ~ 2 kpc). Our simulations sample a parameter space of plausible initial magnetic field strengths and field configurations. In the simulations, we observe strong velocity shears associated with the cold fronts amplifying the magnetic field along the cold front surfaces, increasing the magnetic field strength in these layers by up to an order of magnitude, and boosting the magnetic pressure up to near-equipartition with thermal pressure in some cases. In these layers, the magnetic field becomes strong enough to stabilize the cold fronts against Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities, resulting in sharp, smooth fronts as those seen in observations of real clusters. These magnetic fields also result in strong suppression of mixing of high and low-entropy gas in the cluster, seen in our simulations of mergers in the absence of a magnetic field. As a result, the heating of the core due to sloshing is very modest and is unable to stave off a cooling catastrophe.
We present line-of-sight gas sloshing first found in a cool core in a galaxy cluster. The galaxy cluster Abell 907 is identified as a relaxed cluster owing to its global X-ray surface brightness taken by the Chandra X-ray Observatory. The X-ray residual image after removing the global emission of the intracluster medium (ICM), however, shows an arc-like positive excess and a negative excess surrounding the central positive excess in the cluster core, which in turn indicates a disturbance of the ICM. We analyze the X-ray spectra extracted from both regions and find that (1) the ICM temperature and the metal abundance in the positive excess are lower and higher than those in the negative excess, respectively, and (2) the ICM is nearly in pressure equilibrium. We also find a slight redshift difference between the positive and the negative excesses, which corresponds to the velocity shear of $1680^{+1300}_{-920}$ km s$^{-1}$ ($1sigma$). The X-ray residual image and the ICM properties are consistent with those expected by line-of-sight gas sloshing. Assuming that the gas is moving toward inverse-parallel to each other along the line-of-sight, the shear velocity is expected to be $sim 800$ km s$^{-1}$. The velocity field of this level is able to provide non-thermal pressure support by $sim 34%$ relative to the thermal one. The total kinetic energy inferred from the shear velocity corresponds to $sim 30%$ of the bolometric luminosity of the sloshing ICM. Abell 907 is therefore complementary to galaxy clusters in which gas sloshing takes place in the plane of the sky, and is important for understanding gas dynamics driven by sloshing and its influence on the heating to prevent runaway cooling.
Faraday rotation and synchrotron emission from extragalactic radio sources give evidence for the presence of magnetic fields extending over ~Mpc scales. However, the origin of these fields remains elusive. With new high-resolution grid simulations we studied the growth of magnetic fields in a massive galaxy cluster that in several aspects is similar to the Coma cluster. We investigated models in which magnetic fields originate from primordial seed fields with comoving strengths of 0.1 nG at redshift z=30. The simulations show evidence of significant magnetic field amplification. At the best spatial resolution (3.95 kpc), we are able to resolve the scale where magnetic tension balances the bending of magnetic lines by turbulence. This allows us to observe the final growth stage of the small-scale dynamo. To our knowledge this is the first time that this is seen in cosmological simulations of the intracluster medium. Our mock observations of Faraday Rotation provide a good match to observations of the Coma cluster. However, the distribution of magnetic fields shows strong departures from a simple Maxwellian distribution, suggesting that the three-dimensional structure of magnetic fields in real clusters may be significantly different than what is usually assumed when inferring magnetic field values from rotation measure observations.
The distribution of metals in the intracluster medium (ICM) of galaxy clusters provides valuable information on their formation and evolution, on the connection with the cosmic star formation and on the effects of different gas processes. By analyzing a sample of simulated galaxy clusters, we study the chemical enrichment of the ICM, its evolution, and its relation with the physical processes included in the simulation and with the thermal properties of the core. These simulations, consisting of re-simulations of 29 Lagrangian regions performed with an upgraded version of the SPH GADGET-3 code, have been run including two different sets of baryonic physics: one accounts for radiative cooling, star formation, metal enrichment and supernova (SN) feedback, and the other one further includes the effects of feedback from active galactic nuclei (AGN). In agreement with observations, we find an anti-correlation between entropy and metallicity in cluster cores, and similar radial distributions of heavy-element abundances and abundance ratios out to large cluster-centric distances (~R180). In the outskirts, namely outside of ~0.2R180, we find a remarkably homogeneous metallicity distribution, with almost flat profiles of the elements produced by either SNIa or SNII. We investigated the origin of this phenomenon and discovered that it is due to the widespread displacement of metal-rich gas by early (z>2-3) AGN powerful bursts, acting on small high-redshift haloes. Our results also indicate that the intrinsic metallicity of the hot gas for this sample is on average consistent with no evolution between z=2 and z=0, across the entire radial range.