Simulating the gamma-ray emission from galaxy clusters: a universal cosmic ray spectrum and spatial distribution
Anders Pinzke, Christoph Pfrommer

TL;DR
This paper uses high-resolution galaxy cluster simulations with advanced cosmic ray physics to develop universal models for gamma-ray emission, aiding future observational detection efforts.
Contribution
It introduces a semi-analytic model for cosmic ray distribution and gamma-ray emission in galaxy clusters based on simulations with an improved spectral description.
Findings
CR spectra show surprising universality across clusters.
Spatial CR distribution depends on cluster mass.
Predicted gamma-ray fluxes are conservative but detectable with future observations.
Abstract
Entering a new era of high-energy gamma-ray experiments, there is an exciting quest for the first detection of gamma-ray emission from clusters of galaxies. To complement these observational efforts, we use high-resolution simulations of a broad sample of galaxy clusters, and follow self-consistent cosmic ray (CR) physics using an improved spectral description. We study CR proton spectra as well as the different contributions of the pion decay and inverse Compton emission to the total flux and present spectral index maps. We find a universal spectrum of the CR component in clusters with surprisingly little scatter across our cluster sample. The spatial CR distribution also shows approximate universality; it depends however on the cluster mass. This enables us to derive a semi-analytic model for both, the distribution of CRs as well as the pion-decay gamma-ray emission that results from…
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