Buoyancy Instabilities in a Weakly Collisional Intracluster Medium
Matthew W. Kunz, Tamara Bogdanovic, Christopher S. Reynolds, James M., Stone

TL;DR
This study uses advanced MHD simulations to explore how anisotropic viscosity and conduction influence buoyancy-driven instabilities in galaxy cluster plasmas, affecting magnetic field structure and thermal regulation.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive nonlinear analysis of MTI and HBI with microscale effects, revealing their roles in cluster thermal dynamics and magnetic field morphology.
Findings
Anisotropic viscosity impairs HBI reorientation of magnetic fields.
Conduction can offset cooling in most of the cool core.
Magnetic fields form folded structures with anti-correlated curvature and strength.
Abstract
The intracluster medium of galaxy clusters is a weakly collisional, high-beta plasma in which the transport of heat and momentum occurs primarily along magnetic-field lines. Anisotropic heat conduction allows convective instabilities to be driven by temperature gradients of either sign, the magnetothermal instability (MTI) in the outskirts of non-isothermal clusters and the heat-flux buoyancy-driven instability (HBI) in their cooling cores. We employ the Athena MHD code to investigate the nonlinear evolution of these instabilities, self-consistently including the effects of anisotropic viscosity (i.e. Braginskii pressure anisotropy), anisotropic conduction, and radiative cooling. We highlight the importance of the microscale instabilities that inevitably accompany and regulate the pressure anisotropies generated by the HBI and MTI. We find that, in all but the innermost regions of…
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