How AGN feedback and metal cooling shape cluster entropy profiles
Yohan Dubois, Julien Devriendt, Romain Teyssier, Adrianne Slyz

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological simulations to explore how AGN feedback and metal cooling influence the development of entropy profiles in galaxy clusters, revealing their roles in forming cool core and non cool core clusters.
Contribution
It demonstrates that AGN feedback and metal cooling interactions are crucial in shaping cluster entropy profiles, explaining the formation of different cluster types.
Findings
AGN feedback pre-heats proto-clusters, preventing early central mass concentration.
Supernovae spread metals, increasing cooling efficiency of the ICM.
Metal cooling leads to non cool core cluster formation in simulations.
Abstract
Observed clusters of galaxies essentially come in two flavors: non cool core clusters characterized by an isothermal temperature profile and a central entropy floor, and cool-core clusters where temperature and entropy in the central region are increasing with radius. Using cosmological resimulations of a galaxy cluster, we study the evolution of its intracluster medium (ICM) gas properties, and through them we assess the effect of different (sub-grid) modelling of the physical processes at play, namely gas cooling, star formation, feedback from supernovae and active galactic nuclei (AGN). More specifically we show that AGN feedback plays a major role in the pre-heating of the proto-cluster as it prevents a high concentration of mass from collecting in the center of the future galaxy cluster at early times. However, AGN activity during the cluster's later evolution is also required to…
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