Magnetic Reconnection in Galaxy Clusters

Abstract

Galaxy clusters contain an intra-cluster medium (ICM) with temperatures of tens of millions of Kelvin. Cosmological structure formation simulations show that this diffuse gas is heated not only by adiabatic gravitational compression but also by shock waves and turbulence generated during mergers of galaxy groups and clusters. These processes are expected to produce magnetic fields and cosmic rays, observed through synchrotron polarization. One structure formed during cluster evolution is the cold front, a contact discontinuity created when colder gas moves transonically through hotter gas. Using MeerKAT, GMRT, and ATCA, we recently discovered radio emission along cold fronts in two galaxy clusters, with spectra indicating re-acceleration at the discontinuity. This presents a new puzzle because the standard mechanism in galaxy clusters, Fermi acceleration, is not naturally expected there. We propose magnetic reconnection as the re-acceleration mechanism. Compression and stretching of magnetized plasma at the discontinuity can generate current sheets that trigger reconnection, as also suggested by simulations. With AA*, we will probe broadband radio spectra at high spatial resolution to constrain where re-acceleration occurs. Polarization measurements will reveal magnetic-field structures and clarify the conditions required for magnetic reconnection.

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