Can giant radio halos probe the merging rate of galaxy clusters?
R. Cassano, G. Brunetti, C. Giocoli, and S. Ettori

TL;DR
This study explores how giant radio halos in galaxy clusters can serve as indicators of the cluster merging rate over cosmic time, combining observations with cosmological simulations to constrain merger properties.
Contribution
It introduces a method to connect observed fractions of merging clusters and radio halos with theoretical merger rates, providing new constraints on merger mass ratios and timescales.
Findings
Observed merging fraction fm ~62-67%
Radio halo fraction fRH ~44-51%
Merger mass ratio xi_m ~0.1-0.18
Abstract
Radio and X-ray observations of galaxy clusters probe a direct link between cluster mergers and giant radio halos (RH), suggesting that these sources can be used as probes of the cluster merging rate with cosmic time. In this paper we carry out an explorative study that combines the observed fractions of merging clusters (fm) and RH (fRH) with the merging rate predicted by cosmological simulations and attempt to infer constraints on merger properties of clusters that appear disturbed in X-rays and of clusters with RH. We use morphological parameters to identify merging systems and analyze the currently largest sample of clusters with radio and X-ray data (M500>6d14 Msun, and 0.2<z<0.33, from the Planck SZ cluster catalogue). We found that in this sample fm~62-67% while fRH~44-51%. The comparison of the theoretical f_m with the observed one allows to constrain the combination…
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