Turbulence and Radio Mini-halos in the Sloshing Cores of Galaxy Clusters
John ZuHone (NASA/GSFC), Maxim Markevitch (NASA/GSFC), Gianfranco, Brunetti (INAF), and Simona Giacintucci (University of Maryland-College Park)

TL;DR
This study uses high-resolution MHD simulations to demonstrate that turbulence generated by gas sloshing in galaxy cluster cores can reaccelerate electrons, producing radio mini-halos consistent with observations.
Contribution
The paper presents the first detailed simulation coupling gas sloshing with relativistic electron acceleration, supporting the turbulence reacceleration model for radio mini-halos.
Findings
Sloshing generates turbulence of 50-200 km/s within cold fronts.
Reaccelerated electrons produce diffuse radio emission matching observed mini-halos.
Simulated inverse-Compton X-ray emission aligns with expectations from relativistic electrons.
Abstract
A number of relaxed, cool-core galaxy clusters exhibit diffuse, steep-spectrum radio sources in their central regions, known as radio mini-halos. It has been proposed that the relativistic electrons responsible for the emission have been reaccelerated by turbulence generated by the sloshing of the cool core gas. We present a high-resolution MHD simulation of gas sloshing in a galaxy cluster coupled with subgrid simulations of relativistic electron acceleration to test this hypothesis. Our simulation shows that the sloshing motions generate turbulence on the order of 50-200 km s on spatial scales of 50-100 kpc and below in the cool core region within the envelope of the sloshing cold fronts, whereas outside the cold fronts, there is negligible turbulence. This turbulence is potentially strong enough to reaccelerate relativistic electron seeds (with initial…
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