Cosmological MHD Simulations of Galaxy Cluster Radio Relics: Insights and Warnings for Observations
Samuel W. Skillman, Hao Xu, Eric J. Hallman, Brian W. O'Shea, Jack O., Burns, Hui Li, David C. Collins, Michael L. Norman

TL;DR
This study uses cosmological MHD simulations to model galaxy cluster radio relics, revealing how viewing angle and shock properties influence observed radio features and cautioning against simplified interpretations.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive simulation framework combining MHD, shock modeling, and synthetic radio observations to analyze galaxy cluster radio relics.
Findings
Radio relic morphology depends strongly on viewing angle.
Shock Mach number alone is insufficient to characterize radio emission.
Spatial spectral index variation can mimic synchrotron aging.
Abstract
Non-thermal radio emission from cosmic ray electrons in the vicinity of merging galaxy clusters is an important tracer of cluster merger activity, and is the result of complex physical processes that involve magnetic fields, particle acceleration, gas dynamics, and radiation. In particular, objects known as radio relics are thought to be the result of shock-accelerated electrons that, when embedded in a magnetic field, emit synchrotron radiation in the radio wavelengths. In order to properly model this emission, we utilize the adaptive mesh refinement simulation of the magnetohydrodynamic evolution of a galaxy cluster from cosmological initial conditions. We locate shock fronts and apply models of cosmic ray electron acceleration that are then input into radio emission models. We have determined the thermodynamic properties of this radio-emitting plasma and constructed synthetic radio…
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