A new picture of the formation of cooling cores via cluster mergers
J. O. Burns, P. M. Motl (University of Missouri), C. Loken (CITA), M. L. Norman (UCSD), G. Bryan (MIT)
Abstract
Recent state of the art simulations of structure formation with the effects of
radiative cooling properly accounted for have suggested a new
understanding of cooling cores in rich galaxy clusters. We find that cores of
cool gas, material that would be identified as a classical cooling flow,
are built from the accretion of discrete, stable subclusters.
This hypothesis of hierarchical assembly of cool gas naturally explains
the high frequency of cooling cores in rich galaxy clusters despite the
fact that a majority of these clusters show evidence of substructure
which is believed to arise from recent merger activity. Our simulations were
computed with a coupled N-body, Eulerian AMR hydrodynamics code using seven
levels of refinement (corresponding to 15.6 h-1 kpc resolution within
a volume of 256 h-1 Mpc on a side) and assuming a standard
CDM
cosmology.
CATEGORY: CLUSTERS OF GALAXIES