Cosmic ray transport in galaxy clusters: implications for radio halos, gamma-ray signatures, and cool core heating
Torsten A. Ensslin, Christoph Pfrommer, Francesco Miniati, and, Kandaswamy Subramanian

TL;DR
This paper explores how cosmic ray transport mechanisms influence their distribution in galaxy clusters, affecting observable phenomena like radio halos and gamma-ray emissions, and suggests CR streaming plays a key role in cluster core heating.
Contribution
It introduces a model considering CR streaming and advection, explaining the bimodal distribution of CRs and related emissions in galaxy clusters, independent of radio halo formation theories.
Findings
Bimodality of CR distribution explains radio halo bimodality.
CR streaming influences spectral steepening of radio halos.
CR streaming may heat cool cluster cores, affecting cooling flows.
Abstract
We investigate the interplay of cosmic ray (CR) propagation and advection in galaxy clusters. Propagation in form of CR diffusion and streaming tends to drive the CR radial profiles towards being flat, with equal CR number density everywhere. Advection of CR by the turbulent gas motions tends to produce centrally enhanced profiles. We assume that the CR streaming velocity is of the order of the sound velocity. This is motivated by plasma physical arguments. The CR streaming is then usually larger than typical advection velocities and becomes comparable or lower than this only for periods with trans- and super-sonic cluster turbulence. As a consequence a bimodality of the CR spatial distribution results. Strongly turbulent, merging clusters should have a more centrally concentrated CR energy density profile with respect to relaxed ones with very subsonic turbulence. This translates into…
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