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Nonthermal Radiation from Merging Clusters of Galaxies. Robert C. Berrington (NRL) Chuck Dermer (NRL) Penn State U., May 27 th , 2003. (ApJ, in press, 2003, astro/ph 0209436). Outline. Shocks are formed during structure formation in merging clusters of galaxies
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Nonthermal Radiation from Merging Clusters of Galaxies Robert C. Berrington (NRL) Chuck Dermer (NRL) Penn State U., May 27th, 2003 (ApJ, in press, 2003, astro/ph 0209436)
Outline • Shocks are formed during structure formation in merging clusters of galaxies • Nonthermal particle and photon production: • radio, UV, X-ray, g-ray emission • Contributions to unidentified EGRET g-ray sources and diffuse background radiations • UHECR acceleration • Nonthermal probe of CDM distribution
Structure Formation • Density fluctuations cause region to collapse. • Magnitude of the density fluctuation determines the formation time • Larger structures form by accreting smaller clumps--hierarchical merging • Lumpy, continuous accretion • Mergers (virialized clumps) Major mergers (disrupts internal dynamics of dominant cluster; >~ 60% relative masses) Minor mergers (~10-60%) Accretion processes (<10%) (Fujita and Sarazin 2001) B. Moore, www.nbody.net
Rich Clusters Contain thousands of Galaxies Masses ~1015 Msun Poor Clusters Contain hundreds of Galaxies Masses ~1014 MSun Physical Properties of Galaxy Clusters Coma MKW4
Regular and Irregular Clusters Berrington, Lugger, and Cohn 2002 • Measure velocity distributions • Subcluster structure in Abell 2256
Galaxy Clusters at X-ray Energies • Hot gas ~5-15% of total mass of cluster • Hot ICM emits in X-ray via thermal bremsstrahlung (free-free) • Rich clusters: ~ 5-10 keV • Poor clusters: ~1-5 keV • Lx ~ 1043-1045 ergs s-1 • Tx ~ 2-10 keV
b-model density distributions • Inferred from surface brightness density profile • Profile of bulge/elliptical galaxy and large-scale galaxy cluster structure • Spherically symmetric, isothermal beta-model profile:
Model Cluster (Bode et al. 1994) • N-body simulation • CDM cluster and individual galaxy halo King-model distributions • 80000 particles per cluster; 40000 in DM halo; 40000 in galaxies of which 10% in normal matter
The Physics of Cluster Mergers • Total gravitational energy available:
Cluster Merger Simulation • Zero impact parameter • Cluster galaxies evolutionary • History: morphology of disturbed system (e.g., cD galaxies ) • Merger rate of supermassive black holes • Merger trees
Semi-Analytic Cluster Dynamics • Cluster infall velocity • Assume matter follows an isothermal or NFW model • Calculate merging cluster infall velocity and center-of-mass position by solving: M(r) is the mass interior to radius r, m is subcluster mass. For b-model:
Shocks in Merging Clusters • Shocks form in ICM at boundary • if vs exceeds sound speed of ICM • Thermal particles swept up in shock • Accelerated via first-order Fermi • Sizes: ~1 Mpc are possible • May also reaccelerate particles • Head-tail radio galaxies nearby
Hydrodynamical Simulations • Show development of shocks both before and after center-of-mass passage. Ricker and Sarazin (ApJ, 561, 621, 2001)
Cluster Radio Emission • Nonthermal Synchrotron radiation • Luminosity: ~1040-1042 ergs s-1 • Steep spectra • Radio galaxies • Sources of extended radio emission • Radio Halos • No optical counterpart; mimic X-ray morphology • Typically with sizes ~1 Mpc • Occur in most massive and X-ray luminous rich clusters • Unpolarized • Radio Relics Peripheral Halos • Irregularly shaped; cluster periphery • Linearly polarized from shock compression • Found in clusters with evidence of a recent or ongoing merger Coma A2256
Nonthermal Cluster Emissions • Nonthermal X-ray Emission • B-SAX, RXTE obs. of A1656 (Coma), A2256, A3667 (~1043-1044 ergs s-1) • Compton-scattered CMB • Nonthermal UV Emission • EUVE observations (~60-250 eV) of Virgo, Coma, Fornax, A2199, … • Either Compton-scattered CMB or thermal tail emission • > 100 MeV g-ray Emission • Association with unidentified EGRET sources Coma (Fusco-Femiano et al. 1999)
Shock Dynamics • Solve shock jump conditions • Density follows Isothermal model for both clusters • Dominant cluster rc = 250 kpc, R1=1.5 Mpc, = 0.75, n0 = 10-3 cm-3 • Merging cluster rc = 150 kpc, R2=0.75 Mpc, = 0.75, n0 = 10-3 cm-3 • Energy density equal in forward and reverse shock fluid Shocked fluid velocities
Shock Speeds • Forward and reverse Mach numbers: • Compression ratio: • = 5/3 is the ratio of specific heats for an ideal gas
Fermi Acceleration at Shocks • First-order (shock) more important than second-order (stochastic) in nonrelativistic shocks • Produces power law distribution • Index determined from compression ratio
Evolution of Compression Ratio, Spectral Index Reverse Shock Forward Shock
Nonthermal Particle Evolution • Fokker-Plank equation Coulomb diffusion term Energy loss rate Energy gain rate from stochastic acceleration Source term Catastrophic loss from p-p, p-, and diffusion out of the system
Electrons Synchrotron: Bremsstrahlung: Compton: First-order Coulomb: Protons Coulomb: Physical Processes/Energy Loss Rates • Coulomb diffusion coefficient:
Particle Injection • Power law distribution with exponential cutoff • Occurs only if M 1.0 • Occurs only during lifetime of shock • Normalization • Where e,p is an efficiency factor, and is set to 5%. • Typical values are Etot1063-64 ergs
Maximum Particle Energies • Acceleration time constraint • Energy loss constraint • for electrons • for protons • Size-scale limitation
Maximum Particle Energies B = 0.1 mG
Nuclear Losses • Pion-production event results in a proton loosing 1/3 of its energy. Treat as a loss with time scale • Secondary electrons produced by proton-proton interactions
Photopion Losses • p- interaction result in a proton losing ~1/2 to ~1/5 of its energy. • Treated with a loss timescale • Adopted cross sections are • p (Ep) = 380 mb for 200 MeV < Ep < 500 MeV (K = 0.2) • p (Ep) = 120 mb for Ep > 500 MeV (K = 0.5) (Atoyan and Dermer 2003)
Escape • Particles diffuse away from the host cluster on a time scale • Clusters are storage volumes for < 1018 eV cosmic rays Rcl is the radius of the cluster, and Bohm is Bohm diffusion coefficient Larmor radius: (Berezinsky, Blasi,Ptuskin 1997)
Particle Energy Spectra zi=0.3; B=1.0 mG
with metric Redshift Evolution and Energy Loss • (0, R, ) (mass, curvature, and dark energy) • We adopt (0.3, 0.0, 0.7) • Redshift of cluster: • Total Energy Dependence • Thermal Bremsstrahlung redshift dependence • Cosmic Microwave Background (CMBR) dependence • UCMBR(z) = UCMBR(z=0) (1 + z)4 • UCMBR(z=0) = 2.5 x 10-7 MeV cm-3 • Particle energy loss processes
Particle Energy-Loss Timescale n=10-3 cm-3; B=1.0 mG n=10-6 cm-3; B=0.1 mG
Nonthermal Photon Spectra zi=0.3, z=0.22 z=0
Nonthermal Photon Spectra B = 1.0G
Nonthermal Photon Spectra B = 0.1G
Nonthermal Particle Luminosity Evolution B= 1 mG zi=0.3 B= 0.1 mG Expect to detect tens to hundreds of galaxy clusters with LOFAR
Unidentified EGRET sources? • Statistical test associating Abell clusters with unidentified EGRET sources. (Colafrancesco 2001; Kitayama and Totani 2002) • Previous studies have assumed an unusually hard particle distribution • If we assume softer spectra—power law slopes ~2.4 • Need luminosities >>1043 ergs s-1 for >100 MeV at a distance of ~100 Mpc
Detection with GLAST • Expect several to tens of clusters of galaxies to be observed with GLAST
Diffuse Extragalactic -ray Background • Structure formation shocks could produce 50% of g-ray background (Loeb and Waxman 2000) • > 10 MeV power-law with slope: 2.100.03 • Central cusps in dark matter profiles will harden spectral indices • Supported by numerical simulations, and gravitational lensing • Observational evidence questionable Sreekumar et al. 1998
Photon Spectra when Nonthermal Particles are Hadronically Dominated
NFW Profile • Cuspy central density profile
Effect of NFW profile • If CDM distribution is traced by normal matter distribution, clusters of galaxies are • weak and soft -ray sources • make small (~1%) contribution to diffuse extragalactic -ray background • do not accelerate particles to ultra-high (> 1019 eV) energies • If CDM distribution is described by NFW profile, clusters of galaxies are • Slightly harder -ray sources • Could make stronger contribution to diffuse extragalactic -ray background
Nonthermal Particle Pressure • Each cluster merger event will contribute a population of nonthermal cosmic rays • Most clusters experience several mergers • Proton distribution is cumulative • Applies pressure in addition to the thermal gas of the system • Nonthermal proton Coulomb processes provide additional heating source
Nonthermal Emission from Cluster Merger Shocks: Summary • Unidentified EGRET sources • Diffuse Extragalactic -ray Background • Nonthermal Particle Pressure • Detectability with GLAST and LOFAR • Should be able to detect these features with the next generation of -ray observatories • Possible indicator of the dark matter profiles • Not a dominant contributor to the Diffuse Extragalactic -ray Background • Will significantly alter thermal X-ray emission
Structure Formation • Density fluctuations cause region to collapse. • Magnitude of the density fluctuation determines the formation time • Larger structures form by accreting smaller clumps--hierarchical merging • Lumpy, continuous accretion
Press-Schecter Formalism • Gives mass distribution of galaxy clusters assuming linear perturbation theory • Structure is built up by hierarchical merging • Fits computer models of structure formation
Structure Formation • Lacey-Cole (LC) function • Gives rate of mergers versus redshift and accreting body mass • Similar to PS formalism
Lacey-Cole Formalism • Probability of Mergers of Structures with different masses with cosmic time
External Pressure Accretion shock Nonthermal Particle Pressure • Accretion vs. Cluster merger shocks • Accretion acts as an external pressure Infalling matter