On the evolution of cooling cores in X-ray galaxy clusters
Stefano Ettori, Fabrizio Brighenti

TL;DR
This study models the evolution of cooling cores in galaxy clusters over cosmic time, showing how radiative cooling alone influences their physical properties and profiles, aligning with observations of nearby clusters.
Contribution
It provides a detailed simulation framework for the evolution of cooling cores considering radiative cooling and gravity, without AGN feedback, matching observed profiles.
Findings
Cooling radius grows from ~0.01 R200 at z>2 to ~0.05 R200 at z=0.
Gas density and surface brightness increase by 15-20% per Gyr; temperature decreases by 10% per Gyr.
X-ray luminosity doubles over 10 Gyr, while temperature within core remains stable when excluding inner regions.
Abstract
(Abridged) To define a framework for the formation and evolution of the cooling cores in X-ray galaxy clusters, we study how the physical properties change as function of the cosmic time in the inner regions of a 4 keV and 8 keV galaxy cluster under the action of radiative cooling and gravity only. The cooling radius, R_cool, defined as the radius at which the cooling time equals the Universe age at given redshift, evolves from ~0.01 R200 at z>2, where the structures begin their evolution, to ~0.05 R200 at z=0. The values measured at 0.01 R200 show an increase of about 15-20 per cent per Gyr in the gas density and surface brightness and a decrease with a mean rate of 10 per cent per Gyr in the gas temperature. The emission-weighted temperature diminishes by about 25 per cent and the bolometric X-ray luminosity rises by a factor ~2 after 10 Gyrs when all the cluster emission is…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research
