Cosmological simulations of galaxy clusters
Stefano Borgani (DAUT, U.Trieste), Andrey Kravtsov (KITP, U.Chicago)

TL;DR
This paper reviews how numerical simulations of galaxy clusters compare with observations, highlighting successes in reproducing some properties and challenges like the cool-core discrepancy and baryon fraction issues, emphasizing the need for additional physics.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of recent simulation results, comparing them with observations, and discusses the physical processes needed to improve modeling accuracy.
Findings
Simulations reproduce X-ray scaling relations well.
Outer cluster regions show regular, gravity-dominated behavior.
Simulations struggle with cool-core structures and baryon fractions.
Abstract
We review recent progress in the description of the formation and evolution of galaxy clusters in a cosmological context by using numerical simulations. We focus our presentation on the comparison between simulated and observed X-ray properties, while we will also discuss numerical predictions on properties of the galaxy population in clusters. Many of the salient observed properties of clusters, such as X-ray scaling relations, radial profiles of entropy and density of the intracluster gas, and radial distribution of galaxies are reproduced quite well. In particular, the outer regions of cluster at radii beyond about 10 per cent of the virial radius are quite regular and exhibit scaling with mass remarkably close to that expected in the simplest case in which only the action of gravity determines the evolution of the intra-cluster gas. However, simulations generally fail at reproducing…
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