Anisotropic Thermal Conduction as a Driver of Jet Collimation and Magnetic Field Amplification on Cold Fronts
Nana Matsuno, Takaaki Yokoyama, Mami Machida

TL;DR
This study uses 2D MHD simulations to show that anisotropic thermal conduction enhances AGN jet collimation and magnetic field amplification in galaxy cluster cold fronts.
Contribution
It demonstrates how anisotropic thermal conduction influences jet morphology and magnetic fields, highlighting a conductive collimation mechanism in galaxy clusters.
Findings
Thermal conduction increases jet collimation by a factor of ~4.
Magnetic field strength along cold fronts is amplified by up to 1.5 times.
Jet collimation correlates with conduction efficiency.
Abstract
Galaxy clusters contain a hot, diffuse, and weakly magnetized plasma known as the intracluster medium (ICM). In this environment, how thermal conduction influences plasma dynamics and the conditions under which it operates efficiently remain open questions in cluster physics. Systems in which active galactic nuclei (AGN) jets interact with cold fronts produced by cluster mergers provide a unique setting to examine the interplay between conduction, jet dynamics, and ordered magnetic fields. To interpret the detailed structures revealed by recent observations, it is therefore important, as a first theoretical step, to quantify how thermal conduction modifies AGN jet morphology and the surrounding magnetic-field configuration. We perform two-dimensional magnetohydrodynamic (MHD) simulations of an AGN jet in an ICM environment, incorporating anisotropic thermal conduction with varying…
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