Isotropic Heating of Galaxy Cluster Cores via Rapidly Reorienting AGN Jets
Arif Babul, Prateek Sharma, Christopher S. Reynolds

TL;DR
This paper proposes a model where rapidly reorienting AGN jets, caused by stochastic accretion episodes and black hole spin axis changes, can isotropically heat galaxy cluster cores, explaining observed jet-lobe offsets.
Contribution
It introduces a new model linking black hole spin reorientation to isotropic heating of cluster cores, addressing limitations of narrow jets in heating efficiency.
Findings
AGN jets can heat cluster cores nearly isotropically.
Black hole spins in cool-core clusters are likely slow.
Predicted quasars in 1-2 rich clusters at z<0.5.
Abstract
AGN jets carry more than sufficient energy to stave off catastrophic cooling of the intracluster medium (ICM) in the cores of cool-core clusters. However, in order to prevent catastrophic cooling, the ICM must be heated in a near-isotropic fashion and narrow bipolar jets with ergs/s, typical of radio AGNs at cluster centres, are inefficient at heating the gas in the transverse direction to the jets. We argue that due to existent conditions in cluster cores, the SMBHs will, in addition to accreting gas via radiatively inefficient flows, experience short stochastic episodes of enhanced accretion via thin discs. In general, the orientation of these accretion discs will be misaligned with the spin axis of the black holes and the ensuing torques will cause the black hole's spin axis (and therefore, the jet axis) to slew and rapidly change direction. This model not…
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