Cause and Effect of Feedback: Multiphase Gas in Cluster Cores Heated by AGN Jets
M. Gaspari, M. Ruszkowski, P. Sharma

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution simulations to show that multiphase gas formation in galaxy cluster cores heated by AGN jets depends on the ratio of thermal instability to free-fall timescales, explaining observed cold filaments.
Contribution
It demonstrates that cold gas filaments form when t_TI/t_ff drops below ~10, providing a physical criterion for cold gas condensation in cluster cores.
Findings
Multiphase filaments form when t_TI/t_ff < 10.
Cold gas 'rains' onto the core, forming a torus and feeding the black hole.
AGN feedback stabilizes the core at higher entropy levels.
Abstract
Multiwavelength data indicate that the X-ray emitting plasma in the cores of galaxy clusters is not cooling catastrophically. To large extent, cooling is offset by heating due to active galactic nuclei (AGN) via jets. The cool-core clusters, with cooler/denser plasmas, show multiphase gas and signs of some cooling in their cores. These observations suggest that the cool core is locally thermally unstable while maintaining global thermal equilibrium. Using high-resolution, three-dimensional simulations we study the formation of multiphase gas in cluster cores heated by highly-collimated bipolar AGN jets. Our key conclusion is that spatially extended multiphase filaments form only when the instantaneous ratio of the thermal instability and free-fall timescales (t_TI/t_ff) falls below a critical threshold of \approx 10. When this happens, dense cold gas decouples from the hot ICM phase and…
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