Why Do Only Some Galaxy Clusters Have Cool Cores?
Jack O. Burns (1), Eric J. Hallman (1), Brennan Gantner (1), Patrick, M. Motl (2), Michael L. Norman (3) ((1) University of Colorado, (2) Louisiana, State University, (3) University of California-San Diego)

TL;DR
This study uses advanced cosmological simulations to explore why some galaxy clusters develop cool cores while others do not, revealing that their formation history and merger events play crucial roles.
Contribution
The paper demonstrates, through simulations, that the evolutionary history and merger timing determine cool core presence, providing testable predictions for observational differences.
Findings
CC clusters accrete mass more slowly and survive mergers.
NCC clusters experience early major mergers destroying cool cores.
Distinct differences in X-ray profiles and environment between CC and NCC clusters.
Abstract
Flux-limited X-ray samples indicate that about half of rich galaxy clusters have cool cores. Why do only some clusters have cool cores while others do not? In this paper, cosmological N-body + Eulerian hydrodynamic simulations, including radiative cooling and heating, are used to address this question as we examine the formation and evolution of cool core (CC) and non-cool core (NCC) clusters. These adaptive mesh refinement simulations produce both CC and NCC clusters in the same volume. They have a peak resolution of 15.6 h^{-1} kpc within a (256 h^{-1} Mpc)^3 box. Our simulations suggest that there are important evolutionary differences between CC clusters and their NCC counterparts. Many of the numerical CC clusters accreted mass more slowly over time and grew enhanced cool cores via hierarchical mergers; when late major mergers occurred, the CC's survived the collisions. By…
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