Gravitational Quenching by Clumpy Accretion in Cool Core Clusters: Convective Dynamical Response to Overheating
Yuval Birnboim, Avishai Dekel

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that gravitational heating via clumpy gas accretion can effectively prevent cooling flows in galaxy clusters, with simulations showing stable temperature and entropy profiles consistent with observations.
Contribution
It introduces a new model of gravitational heating through gas clumps, showing its efficiency and stability in balancing cooling in galaxy clusters.
Findings
Gravitational heating exceeds cooling in halos >=10^13 solar masses.
Convection stabilizes the overheated core without altering global properties.
Predicted profiles match observed cool-core cluster data.
Abstract
Many galaxy clusters pose a "cooling-flow problem", where the observed X-ray emission from their cores is not accompanied by enough cold gas or star formation. A continuous energy source is required to balance the cooling rate over the whole core volume. We address the feasibility of a gravitational heating mechanism, utilizing the gravitational energy released by the gas that streams into the potential well of the cluster dark-matter halo. We focus here on a specific form of gravitational heating in which the energy is transferred to the medium thorough the drag exerted on inflowing gas clumps. Using spheri-symmetric hydro simulations with a subgrid representation of these clumps, we confirm our earlier estimates that in haloes >=10^13 solar masses the gravitational heating is more efficient than the cooling everywhere. The worry was that this could overheat the core and generate an…
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