Draping of Cluster Magnetic Fields over Bullets and Bubbles -- Morphology and Dynamic Effects
L. J. Dursi, C. Pfrommer (CITA)

TL;DR
This paper investigates how magnetic fields drape over moving cores in galaxy clusters, affecting their stability, morphology, and thermal properties, with implications for understanding the intra-cluster medium.
Contribution
It provides a three-dimensional analysis of magnetic draping effects, deriving key expressions and demonstrating their impact on core dynamics and magnetic field amplification.
Findings
Magnetic draping layers modify core dynamics and suppress instabilities.
Magnetic fields can slow core fall and alter morphology.
Magnetic layers inhibit thermal conduction, preserving temperature gradients.
Abstract
High-resolution X-ray observations have revealed cavities and `cold fronts' with sharp edges in temperature, density, and metallicity within galaxy clusters. Their presence poses a puzzle since these features are not expected to be hydrodynamically stable, or to remain sharp in the presence of diffusion. However, a moving core or bubble in even a very weakly magnetized plasma necessarily sweeps up enough magnetic field to build up a dynamically important sheath around the object; the layer's strength is set by a competition between `plowing up' of field and field lines slipping around the core. We show that a two-dimensional approach to the problem is quite generally not possible. In three dimensions, we show with analytic arguments and in numerical experiments, that this magnetic layer modifies the dynamics of a plunging core, greatly modifies the effects of hydrodynamic instabilities…
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