论文标题
银河系簇中冷云的破碎和生长:辐射冷却,磁场和热传导的作用
Shattering and growth of cold clouds in galaxy clusters: the role of radiative cooling, magnetic fields and thermal conduction
论文作者
论文摘要
在星系簇中,热热内培养基(ICM)可以在最亮的群集星系周围发展出惊人的多相结构。在理解这一中央星云的起源方面,已经做了很多工作,但是在最初丝状结构被分成单个冷团后,其最终命运的工作减少了。在本文中,我们执行了30个(磁性)的水动力模拟的KPC尺度冷云,该云具有典型的参数,如Galaxy群集模拟所示,以了解是否将云混合回热ICM还是可以持续存在。我们研究了辐射冷却,小规模加热,磁场和(各向异性)热传导对云的长期演变的影响。我们发现,丝片碎片在时间尺度上比压碎时间尺度短,在热培养基中脱离压力平衡,然后粉碎,形成较小的堵塞。这些充当成核位点,以进一步凝结,并通过开尔文 - 霍尔莫尔兹的不稳定性混合,导致冷气质量在75 MYR之内加倍。云的生长取决于密度以及局部加热过程,这决定了云是否经历消融或破碎驱动的进化。磁场放慢速度,但不会防止云的生长,随着对场拓扑敏感的冷和温暖相的演变。与非导电云相比,违反直觉,各向异性热传导增加了冷气体的生长速率,从而导致更大的温暖相。我们得出的结论是,在研究星系簇的长期冷却流程演化时,$ 500 $ PC或更多PC的浓密团块不容忽视。
In galaxy clusters, the hot intracluster medium (ICM) can develop a striking multi-phase structure around the brightest cluster galaxy. Much work has been done on understanding the origin of this central nebula, but less work has studied its eventual fate after the originally filamentary structure is broken into individual cold clumps. In this paper we perform a suite of 30 (magneto-)hydrodynamical simulations of kpc-scale cold clouds with typical parameters as found by galaxy cluster simulations, to understand whether clouds are mixed back into the hot ICM or can persist. We investigate the effects of radiative cooling, small-scale heating, magnetic fields, and (anisotropic) thermal conduction on the long-term evolution of clouds. We find that filament fragments cool on timescales shorter than the crushing timescale, fall out of pressure equilibrium with the hot medium, and shatter, forming smaller clumplets. These act as nucleation sites for further condensation, and mixing via Kelvin-Helmholtz instability, causing cold gas mass to double within 75 Myr. Cloud growth depends on density, as well as on local heating processes, which determine whether clouds undergo ablation- or shattering-driven evolution. Magnetic fields slow down but don't prevent cloud growth, with the evolution of both cold and warm phase sensitive to the field topology. Counter-intuitively, anisotropic thermal conduction increases the cold gas growth rate compared to non-conductive clouds, leading to larger amounts of warm phase as well. We conclude that dense clumps on scales of $500$ pc or more cannot be ignored when studying the long-term cooling flow evolution of galaxy clusters.