4.7 Article

On the formation of cold fronts in massive mergers

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 357, Issue 3, Pages 801-818

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2966.2004.08589.x

Keywords

hydrodynamics; shock waves; galaxies : clusters : general; intergalactic medium

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Using adiabatic hydrodynamical simulations, we follow the evolution of two symmetric cold fronts forming in the remnant of a violent z = 0.3 massive cluster merger. Because the fronts develop after the first passage of the two gas cores of the merging subclusters, and because they soon move ahead of their associated dark matter cores, both the structure and the location of our simulated cold fronts may correspond to a stage that is later than that of most cold fronts observed so far. The cold fronts are preceded by a roughly spherical shock that originates in the centre of the cluster and disappears in the outer regions after 1.6 Gyr. The cold fronts last longer, until z similar to 0. We follow the spatial evolution of the gas of the subcluster cores, and find that a fraction of this gas is liberated in the intracluster medium after core passage, but mainly at apocentre, and that it does not fall back onto the cluster centre. Conversely, we trace back the low-temperature gas constituting the fronts and find that it is initially associated with the two dense cores of the merging clusters. In addition, we find some evidence for discontinuity of the gas velocity field across the edge of the forming cold fronts, suggesting the presence of a contact discontinuity there. In the light of other recent work, we then speculate on the physical mechanism resulting in the cold fronts. We suggest that sloshing induced by strongly varying ram pressure along the subcluster's orbit and/or spatial segregation between the dark matter and gas components of the cores of the subclusters results in strong tidal forces on the gas, and that these forces could be responsible for the deposition of part of the cold dense gas in the surrounding hot intracluster medium. This deposited gas then expands, cools down further, and constitutes the cold fronts.

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