XMAGNET -- Stir before serving: a Lagrangian perspective on mixing-driven condensation in the intracluster medium

Abstract

We aim to characterize the thermodynamic and dynamical conditions leading to condensation in cluster cores, and to assess the role of magnetic fields. We implement a Monte-Carlo tracer particle algorithm in the GPU-accelerated code AthenaPK, and run a purely hydrodynamical and a magnetohydrodynamical (MHD) simulations of an idealized cool-core cluster. We identify the subset of hot ICM tracers that undergo a transition to the cold phase and reconstruct their histories over a lookback time of 300\,Myr prior to condensation. In both runs, the large majority of tracers transitioning to the cold phase follow a thermodynamic pathway driven by mixing, whereby hot ambient gas is entrained onto low-entropy seed clumps that subsequently grow into larger clouds and filaments. In the hydrodynamical run, these seeds form mainly via in-situ cooling at the edges of AGN cavities. In the MHD run, the cold gas cycle is more complex: AGN outflows occasionally shred portions of existing filaments into fragments which are then uplifted, seeding further condensation. In the MHD run, the properties of condensing tracers begin to diverge from the background ICM significantly earlier than in the hydrodynamical run (150\, Myr before the cooling transition versus 30\, Myr), with vorticity and magnetic energy growing together. The turbulent Mach number at condensation is also systematically lower than in the hydrodynamical run. We examine the post-condensation evolution of individual cold structures in the MHD run, namely a massive core filament and two isolated clouds in quiescent regions. We find that magnetic tension dominates over ram pressure as the primary drag force, significantly reducing the clouds' terminal velocity. Our results demonstrate that magnetic fields substantially impact the assembly history and kinematic properties of the cold phase in cool-core clusters.

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