On the Structure of Hot Gas in Halos: Implications for the Lx-Tx Relation & Missing Baryons
Prateek Sharma, Michael McCourt, Ian J. Parrish, Eliot Quataert

TL;DR
This paper develops one-dimensional models of hot gas in dark matter halos, explaining cool core formation, the Lx-Tx relation, and the missing baryons problem, with implications for galaxy formation and baryon distribution.
Contribution
It introduces a model linking thermal instability criteria to core formation, matching observations and explaining baryon deficits in low-mass halos.
Findings
Predicts larger, more tenuous cores in lower-mass halos.
Matches observed X-ray luminosity-temperature relation.
Explains baryon expulsion beyond virial radius in low-mass halos.
Abstract
We present one-dimensional models of the hot gas in dark-matter halos, which both predict the existence of cool cores and explain their structure. Our models are directly applicable to semi-analytic models (SAMs) of galaxy formation. We have previously argued that filaments of cold (~10^4 K) gas condense out of the intracluster medium (ICM) in hydrostatic and thermal equilibrium when the ratio of the thermal instability timescale to the free-fall time falls below 5-10. This criterion corresponds to an upper limit on the density of the ICM and motivates a model in which a density core forms wherever . Consistent with observations and numerical simulations, this model predicts larger and more tenuous cores for lower-mass halos---while the core density in a cluster may be as large as ~ 0.1 cm^{-3}, the core density in the Galactic halo should not…
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