Thermal Instability & the Feedback Regulation of Hot Halos in Clusters, Groups, and Galaxies
Prateek Sharma, Michael McCourt, Eliot Quataert, Ian J. Parrish

TL;DR
This paper investigates how thermal instability and feedback processes regulate the hot gas in galaxy clusters, groups, and galaxies, explaining observed multi-phase media, reduced cooling rates, and the conditions for cold gas formation.
Contribution
It introduces a quantitative criterion involving the ratio t_{TI}/t_{ff} for cold filament formation and explains the self-regulation of thermal balance through feedback mechanisms.
Findings
Cold filaments form when t_{TI}/t_{ff} <~ 10.
Feedback reduces cooling and accretion rates by factors of ~100.
Galactic halos may be balanced by supernova heating.
Abstract
Observations of clusters and groups imply that such halos are roughly in global thermal equilibrium, with heating balancing cooling when averaged over sufficiently long time- and length-scales; the ICM is, however, very likely to be locally thermally unstable. Using simple observationally-motivated heating prescriptions, we show that local thermal instability (TI) can produce a multi-phase medium---with ~ 10000 K cold filaments condensing out of the hot ICM---only when the ratio of the TI timescale in the hot plasma (t_{TI}) to the free-fall timescale (t_{ff}) satisfies t_{TI}/t_{ff} <~ 10. This criterion quantitatively explains why cold gas and star formation are preferentially observed in low-entropy clusters and groups. In addition, the interplay among heating, cooling, and TI reduces the net cooling rate and the mass accretion rate at small radii by factors of ~ 100 relative to…
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