Multiphase condensation in cluster halos: interplay of cooling, buoyancy and mixing

Abstract

Gas in the central regions of cool-core clusters and other massive halos has a short cooling time (1~Gyr). 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 (tti) to the free-fall time (tff) is tti/tff10. The turbulent mixing time tmix is another important time scale: if tmix is short enough, the fluctuations are mixed before they can cool. In this study, we perform high-resolution (5122×768--10242×1536 resolution elements) hydrodynamic simulations of turbulence in a stratified medium, including radiative cooling of the gas. We explore the parameter space of tti/tff and tti/tmix relevant to galaxy and cluster halos. We also study the effect of the steepness of the entropy profile, the strength of turbulent forcing and the nature of turbulent forcing (natural mixture vs. compressive modes) on multiphase gas condensation. We find that larger values of tti/tff or tti/tmix generally imply stability against multiphase gas condensation, whereas larger density fluctuations (e.g., due to compressible turbulence) promote multiphase gas condensation. We propose a new criterion (tti/(tmix,tff)) c2×(c1σs) for when the halo becomes multiphase, where σs denotes the amplitude of logarithmic density fluctuations and c16, c21.8 from an empirical fit to our results.

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