Multiphase condensation in cluster halos: interplay of cooling, buoyancy and mixing
Rajsekhar Mohapatra, Prateek Sharma, Christoph Federrath, Eliot, Quataert

TL;DR
This paper uses high-resolution hydrodynamic simulations to investigate how cooling, buoyancy, and turbulence influence multiphase gas condensation in galaxy cluster halos, proposing a new stability criterion based on turbulence and density fluctuations.
Contribution
It introduces a new empirical criterion for multiphase condensation in halos, considering turbulence, cooling times, and density fluctuations, supported by detailed simulations.
Findings
Larger $t_{ti}/t_{ff}$ or $t_{ti}/t_{mix}$ ratios stabilize halos against condensation.
Compressible turbulence promotes multiphase gas formation.
A new criterion involving density fluctuations predicts halo multiphase state.
Abstract
Gas in the central regions of cool-core clusters and other massive halos has a short cooling time (). Theoretical models predict that this gas is susceptible to multiphase condensation, in which cold gas is expected to condense out of the hot phase if the ratio of the thermal instability growth time scale () to the free-fall time () is . The turbulent mixing time is another important time scale: if is short enough, the fluctuations are mixed before they can cool. In this study, we perform high-resolution (-- resolution elements) hydrodynamic simulations of turbulence in a stratified medium, including radiative cooling of the gas. We explore the parameter space of and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsQuantum, superfluid, helium dynamics · Methane Hydrates and Related Phenomena · Astrophysics and Star Formation Studies
