Galaxy Formation with Local Photoionization Feedback -II. Effect of X-Ray Emission from Binaries and Hot Gas
Rahul Kannan (1), Mark Vogelsberger (1), Greg S. Stinson (2), Joe F., Hennawi (2), Federico Marinacci (1), Volker Springel (3,4), Andrea V. Maccio, (2) ((1) MIT, (2) MPIA, (3) HITS, (4) ZAH)

TL;DR
This study investigates how X-ray emissions from hot gas in galaxy clusters influence gas cooling and star formation in satellite galaxies, revealing significant effects on galaxy quenching processes.
Contribution
It introduces a novel implementation of gas cooling in hydrodynamical simulations to assess the impact of X-ray radiation from the ICM on galaxy evolution, especially in cluster environments.
Findings
X-rays from stellar binaries do not affect gas cooling.
X-ray radiation from the ICM impacts gas in the 10^4-10^6 K range.
Host halo radiation reduces cool gas formation by ~40% in satellites.
Abstract
We study how X-rays from stellar binary systems and the hot intracluster medium (ICM) affect the radiative cooling rates of gas in galaxies. Our study uses a novel implementation of gas cooling in the moving-mesh hydrodynamics code \textsc{arepo}. X-rays from stellar binaries do not affect cooling at all as their emission spectrum is too hard to effectively couple with galactic gas. In contrast, X-rays from the ICM couple well with gas in the temperature range K. Idealised simulations show that the hot halo radiation field has minimal impact on the dynamics of cooling flows in clusters because of the high virial temperature (K), making the interaction between the gas and incident photons very ineffective. Satellite galaxies in cluster environments, on the other hand, experience a high radiation flux due to the emission from the host halo. Low mass satellites ($<…
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