Turbulence and vorticity in Galaxy clusters generated by structure formation

Turbulence is a key ingredient for the evolution of the intracluster medium, whose properties can be predicted with high-resolution numerical simulations. We present initial results on the generation of solenoidal and compressive turbulence in the intracluster medium during the formation of a small-...

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Veröffentlicht in:Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 2017-01, Vol.464 (1), p.210-210
Hauptverfasser: Vazza, F, Jones, T W, Brueggen, M, Brunetti, G, Gheller, C, Porter, D, Ryu, D
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container_title Monthly notices of the Royal Astronomical Society
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creator Vazza, F
Jones, T W
Brueggen, M
Brunetti, G
Gheller, C
Porter, D
Ryu, D
description Turbulence is a key ingredient for the evolution of the intracluster medium, whose properties can be predicted with high-resolution numerical simulations. We present initial results on the generation of solenoidal and compressive turbulence in the intracluster medium during the formation of a small-size cluster using highly resolved, non-radiative cosmological simulations, with a refined monitoring in time. In this first of a series of papers, we closely look at one simulated cluster whose formation was distinguished by a merger around z ~ 0.3. We separate laminar gas motions, turbulence and shocks with dedicated filtering strategies and distinguish the solenoidal and compressive components of the gas flows using Hodge-Helmholtz decomposition. Solenoidal turbulence dominates the dissipation of turbulent motions (~95 per cent) in the central cluster volume at all epochs. The dissipation via compressive modes is found to be more important (~30 per cent of the total) only at large radii ( greater than or equal to 0.5r sub( vir)) and close to merger events. We show that enstrophy (vorticity squared) is good proxy of solenoidal turbulence. All terms ruling the evolution of enstrophy (i.e. baroclinic, compressive, stretching and advective terms) are found to be significant, but in amounts that vary with time and location. Two important trends for the growth of enstrophy in our simulation are identified: first, enstrophy is continuously accreted into the cluster from the outside, and most of that accreted enstrophy is generated near the outer accretion shocks by baroclinic and compressive processes. Secondly, in the cluster interior vortex, stretching is dominant, although the other terms also contribute substantially.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/mnras/stw2351
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source Oxford Journals Open Access Collection
subjects Astronomy
Clusters
Computational fluid dynamics
Computer simulation
Dissipation
Formations
Simulation
Star & galaxy formation
Turbulence
Turbulent flow
Vorticity
title Turbulence and vorticity in Galaxy clusters generated by structure formation
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