Simulating cosmic rays in clusters of galaxies - II. A unified scheme for radio halos and relics with predictions of the gamma-ray emission
Christoph Pfrommer (CITA), Torsten A. Ensslin (MPA), Volker Springel, (MPA)

TL;DR
This paper uses high-resolution simulations to develop a unified model explaining radio halos and relics in galaxy clusters, linking cosmic ray physics with observable non-thermal emissions and predicting gamma-ray signals.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive simulation-based model that unifies the origin of radio halos and relics, incorporating cosmic ray acceleration and transport processes.
Findings
CR protons trace cluster history and activity.
Shock-accelerated CR electrons probe current shocks.
The model explains observed radio properties and merger correlations.
Abstract
The thermal plasma of galaxy clusters lost most of its information on how structure formation proceeded as a result of dissipative processes. In contrast, non-equilibrium distributions of cosmic rays (CR) preserve the information about their injection and transport processes and provide thus a unique window of current and past structure formation processes. This information can be unveiled by observations of non-thermal radiative processes, including radio synchrotron, hard X-ray, and gamma-ray emission. To explore this, we use high-resolution simulations of a sample of galaxy clusters spanning a mass range of about two orders of magnitudes, and follow self-consistent CR physics on top of the radiative hydrodynamics. We model CR electrons that are accelerated at cosmological structure formation shocks and those that are produced in hadronic interactions of CRs with ambient gas protons.…
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