Thermal Instability in Gravitationally-Stratified Plasmas: Implications for Multi-Phase Structure in Clusters and Galaxy Halos
Michael McCourt, Prateek Sharma, Eliot Quataert, and Ian J. Parrish

TL;DR
This study investigates how thermal instability in gravitationally-stratified plasmas leads to multi-phase structures in galaxy clusters and halos, emphasizing the role of cooling timescales and magnetic fields through numerical simulations.
Contribution
It introduces a new criterion based on the ratio of cooling to free-fall timescales for predicting multi-phase structure formation in hot halos.
Findings
Multi-phase structures form when t_cool/t_ff < 1.
Thermal stability is independent of convective stability.
Results align with observational data on cluster gas.
Abstract
We study the interplay among cooling, heating, conduction, and magnetic fields in gravitationally stratified plasmas using simplified, plane-parallel numerical simulations. Since the physical heating mechanism remains uncertain in massive halos such as groups or clusters, we adopt a simple, observationally-motivated prescription which enforces global thermal equilibrium when averaged over large scales. The plasma remains susceptible to local thermal instability, however, and cooling drives an inward flow of material. In contrast to previous results, we argue that the thermal stability of the plasma is independent of its convective stability. We find that the ratio of the cooling timescale to the dynamical timescale t_cool/t_ff controls the saturation of the thermal instability: when t_cool/t_ff < 1, the plasma develops extended multi-phase structure, whereas when t_cool / t_ff > 1 it…
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