Cosmic Ray-Dominated AGN Jets and the Formation of X-ray Cavities in Galaxy Clusters
Fulai Guo, William G. Mathews (UC Santa Cruz)

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates through simulations that cosmic ray-dominated jets can naturally produce the fat X-ray cavities observed in galaxy clusters, resolving previous modeling challenges.
Contribution
It introduces a new simulation approach showing that CR-dominated jets create observed cavity shapes, unlike traditional thermal jets.
Findings
CR-dominated jets produce fat cavities similar to observations
Light, CR-rich jets decelerate rapidly and expand laterally
Simulation results align with radio observations of AGN jets
Abstract
It is widely accepted that feedback from active galactic nuclei (AGN) plays a key role in the evolution of gas in groups and clusters of galaxies. Unequivocal evidence comes from quasi-spherical X-ray cavities observed near cluster centers having sizes ranging from a few to tens of kpc, some containing radio emission. Cavities apparently evolve from the interaction of AGN jets with the intracluster medium (ICM). However, in numerical simulations it has been difficult to create such fat cavities from narrow jets. Ultra-hot thermal jets dominated by kinetic energy typically penetrate deep into the ICM, forming radially elongated cavities at large radii unlike those observed. Here, we study very light jets dominated energetically by relativistic cosmic rays (CRs) with axisymmetric hydrodynamic simulations, investigating the jet evolution both when they are active and when they are later…
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