4.6 Article

Magnetic fields and cosmic rays in clusters of galaxies

Journal

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/1475-7516/2009/09/024

Keywords

particle acceleration; extragalactic magnetic fields; galaxy clusters; absorption and radiation processes

Funding

  1. ISF
  2. AEC

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We argue that the observed correlation between the radio luminosity and the thermal X-ray luminosity of radio emitting galaxy clusters implies that the radio emission is due to secondary electrons that are produced by p-p interactions and lose their energy by emitting synchrotron radiation in a strong magnetic field, B > (8 pi aT(CMB)(4))(1/2)similar or equal to 3 mu G. We construct a simple model that naturally explains the correlation, and show that the observations provide stringent constraints on cluster magnetic fields and cosmic rays (CRs): Within the cores of clusters, the ratio beta(core) between the CR energy (per logarithmic particle energy interval) and the thermal energy is beta(core) similar to 2 . 10(-4); The source of these CRs is most likely the cluster accretion shock, which is inferred to deposit in CRs similar to 0.1 of the thermal energy it generates; The diffusion time of 100 GeV CRs over scales greater than or similar to 100 kpc is not short compared to the Hubble time; Cluster magnetic fields are enhanced by mergers to greater than or similar to 1% of equipartition, and decay (to < 1 mu G) on 1 Gyr time scales. The inferred value of beta(core) implies that high energy gamma-ray emission from secondaries at cluster cores will be difficult to detect with existing and planned instruments.

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