Shaken and stirred: conduction and turbulence in clusters of galaxies
M. Ruszkowski (1), S. Peng Oh (2) ((1) University of Michigan in Ann, Arbor, (2) University of California at Santa Barbara)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates through 3D MHD simulations that weak turbulence can significantly enhance thermal conduction in galaxy cluster cool cores, potentially preventing cooling catastrophes and stabilizing the core.
Contribution
It introduces the novel finding that weak, subsonic turbulence can restore conduction levels in magnetized cluster cores, counteracting magnetic field alignment effects that suppress conduction.
Findings
Weak turbulence randomizes magnetic fields, boosting conduction.
Turbulence can prevent cooling catastrophes in cluster cores.
Results are testable with future radio polarization observations.
Abstract
(abridged) Uninhibited radiative cooling in clusters of galaxies would lead to excessive mass accretion rates contrary to observations. One of the key proposals to offset radiative energy losses is thermal conduction from outer, hotter layers of cool core clusters to their centers. However, conduction is sensitive to magnetic field topology. In cool-core clusters the heat buoyancy instability (HBI) leads to B-fields ordered preferentially in the direction perpendicular to that of gravity, which significantly reduces the level of conduction below the classical Spitzer-Braginskii value. However, the cluster cool cores are rarely in perfect hydrostatic equilibrium. Sloshing motions due to minor mergers, galaxy motions or AGN can significantly perturb the gas and affect the level of thermal conduction. We perform 3D AMR MHD simulations of the effect of turbulence on the properties of the…
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