4.7 Article

Iron abundances and heating of the intracluster medium in hydrodynamical simulations of galaxy clusters

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 339, Issue 4, Pages 1117-1134

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1046/j.1365-8711.2003.06163.x

Keywords

hydrodynamics; methods : N-body simulations; galaxies : abundances; galaxies : clusters : general; galaxies : evolution; intergalactic medium

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Results from a large set of hydrodynamical smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) simulations of galaxy clusters in a flat LambdaCDM cosmology are used to investigate the metal enrichment and heating of the intracluster medium (ICM). The physical modelling of the gas includes radiative cooling, star formation, energy feedback and metal enrichment which follow from the explosions of supernovae of type II and Ia. The metallicity dependence of the cooling function is also taken into account. The gas is metal-enriched from star particles according to the SPH prescriptions. The simulations have been performed to study the dependence of final metal abundances and heating of the ICM on the numerical resolution and the model parameters. For a fiducial set of model prescriptions the results indicate radial iron profiles in broad agreement with observations; global iron abundances are also consistent with data. It is found that the iron distribution in the intracluster medium is critically dependent on the shape of the metal deposition profile. At large radii the radial iron abundance profiles in the simulations are steeper than those in the data, suggesting a dynamical evolution of simulated clusters different from those observed. For low-temperature clusters simulations yield iron abundances below the allowed observational range, unless a minimum diffusion length of metals in the ICM is introduced. The simulated emission-weighted radial temperature profiles are in good agreement with data for cooling flow clusters, but at very small distances from the cluster centres (similar to2 per cent of the virial radii) the temperatures are a factor of similar to2 higher than the measured spectral values. The luminosity-temperature relation is in excellent agreement with the data; cool clusters (T-X similar to 1 keV) have a core excess entropy of similar to200 keV cm(2) and their X-ray properties are unaffected by the amount of feedback energy that has heated the ICM. The findings support the model proposed recently by Bryan, where the cluster X-ray properties are determined by radiative cooling. The fraction of hot gas f(g) at the virial radius increases with T-X, and the distribution obtained from the simulated cluster sample is consistent with the observational ranges.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available