Radial structure, inflow & central mass of stationary radiative galaxy clusters
Curtis J. Saxton (1), Kinwah Wu (1) ((1) Mullard Space Science, Laboratory, University College London)

TL;DR
This paper models the radial structure of galaxy clusters with multiple fluids, revealing a minimum central mass consistent with supermassive black holes and detailing the gas and dark matter profiles in equilibrium.
Contribution
It introduces a self-consistent model of multi-fluid galaxy clusters showing the necessity of a non-zero central mass and characterizing the halo's density and temperature structure.
Findings
Minimum central mass aligns with supermassive black hole observations.
Halo features a dense spike and a core with nearly constant density.
Gas temperature profile exhibits dips and peaks within the dark core.
Abstract
We analyse the radial structure of self-gravitating spheres consisting of multiple interpenetrating fluids, such as the X-ray emitting gas and the dark halo of a galaxy cluster. In these dipolytropic models, adiabatic dark matter sits in equilibrium, while the gas develops a gradual, smooth, quasi-stationary cooling flow. Both affect and respond to the collective gravitational field. We find that all subsonic, radially continuous, steady solutions require a non-zero minimum central point mass. For Mpc-sized halos with 7 to 10 effective degrees of freedom (F2), the minimum central mass is compatible with observations of supermassive black holes. Smaller gas mass influxes enable smaller central masses for wider ranges of F2. The halo comprises a sharp spike around the central mass, embedded within a core of nearly constant density (at 10-10^2.5kpc scales), with outskirts that attenuate…
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