A Semi-Analytical Model for the Formation and Evolution of Radio Relics in Galaxy Clusters
Yihao Zhou, Haiguang Xu, Zhenghao Zhu, Yuanyuan Zhao, Shida Fan,, Chenxi Shan, Yongkai Zhu, Lei Hao, Li Ji, Zhongli Zhang, Xianzhong Zheng

TL;DR
This paper introduces a semi-analytical model incorporating fossil electrons into DSA theory to better explain radio relic formation and evolution in galaxy clusters, aligning well with observations and predicting significant foreground contamination for EoR experiments.
Contribution
The model uniquely integrates fossil relativistic electrons into DSA theory and constrains it with observed relic data, improving understanding of radio relic brightness and distribution.
Findings
Fossil electrons significantly boost radio relic brightness.
Simulated relic distribution matches observed $P_{1400}-M_{\mathrm{vir}}$ relation.
Approximately 7.1% of clusters host relics at 158 MHz, consistent with observations.
Abstract
Radio relics are Mpc-sized synchrotron sources located in the peripheral regions of galaxy clusters. Models based on the diffuse shock acceleration (DSA) scenario have been widely accepted to explain the formation of radio relics. However, a critical challenge to these models is that most observed shocks seem too weak to generate detectable emission, unless fossil electrons, a population of mildly energetic electrons that have been accelerated previously, are included in the models. To address this issue, we present a new semi-analytical model to describe the formation and evolution of radio relics by incorporating fossil relativistic electrons into DSA theory, which is constrained by a sample of 14 observed relics, and employ the Press-Schechter formalism to simulate the relics in a sky field at 50, 158, and 1400 MHz, respectively. Results show that…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstrophysics and Cosmic Phenomena · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
