© 2018 The Author(s). The thermodynamic structure of hot gas in galaxy clusters is sensitive to astrophysical processes and typically difficult to model with galaxy formation simulations. We explore the fraction of cool-core (CC) clusters in a large sample of 370 clusters from IllustrisTNG, examining six common CC definitions. IllustrisTNG produces continuous CC criteria distributions, the extremes of which are classified as CC and non-cool core (NCC), and the criteria are increasingly correlated for more massive clusters. At z = 0, the CC fractions for two criteria are in reasonable agreement with the observed fractions but the other four CC fractions are lower than observed. This result is partly driven by systematic differences between t...
Context. Cool-core clusters are characterized by strong surface brightness peaks in the X-ray emissi...
International audienceWe analysed XMM–Newton EPIC data for 53 galaxy clusters. Through 2D spectral m...
X-ray astronomers often divide galaxy clusters into two classes: “cool core” (CC) and “non-cool core...
The thermodynamic structure of hot gas in galaxy clusters is sensitive to astrophysical processes an...
We present first results on the cooling properties derived from Chandra X-ray observations of 83 hig...
We use the largest complete sample of 64 galaxy clusters (HIghest X-ray FLUx Galaxy Cluster Sample)...
We analyze the physical properties of the gaseous intracluster medium (ICM) at the center of massive...
Context. X ray clusters are conventionally divided into two classes: “cool core” (CC) and “non-cool ...
We present a new model for the creation of cool cores in rich galaxy clusters within a CDM cosmologi...
Why do some clusters have cool cores while others do not? In this paper, cosmological simulations, i...
There are well-observed differences between cool-core (CC)and non-cool-core (NCC)clusters, but the o...
Context. In this work we address the issue of whether the division of clusters in cool cores (CCs) a...
International audienceWe present the rhapsody-g suite of cosmological hydrodynamic zoom simulations ...
We investigate the thermodynamic and chemical structure of the intracluster medium (ICM) across a st...
We present the RHAPSODY-G suite of cosmological hydrodynamic zoom simulations of 10 massive galaxy c...
Context. Cool-core clusters are characterized by strong surface brightness peaks in the X-ray emissi...
International audienceWe analysed XMM–Newton EPIC data for 53 galaxy clusters. Through 2D spectral m...
X-ray astronomers often divide galaxy clusters into two classes: “cool core” (CC) and “non-cool core...
The thermodynamic structure of hot gas in galaxy clusters is sensitive to astrophysical processes an...
We present first results on the cooling properties derived from Chandra X-ray observations of 83 hig...
We use the largest complete sample of 64 galaxy clusters (HIghest X-ray FLUx Galaxy Cluster Sample)...
We analyze the physical properties of the gaseous intracluster medium (ICM) at the center of massive...
Context. X ray clusters are conventionally divided into two classes: “cool core” (CC) and “non-cool ...
We present a new model for the creation of cool cores in rich galaxy clusters within a CDM cosmologi...
Why do some clusters have cool cores while others do not? In this paper, cosmological simulations, i...
There are well-observed differences between cool-core (CC)and non-cool-core (NCC)clusters, but the o...
Context. In this work we address the issue of whether the division of clusters in cool cores (CCs) a...
International audienceWe present the rhapsody-g suite of cosmological hydrodynamic zoom simulations ...
We investigate the thermodynamic and chemical structure of the intracluster medium (ICM) across a st...
We present the RHAPSODY-G suite of cosmological hydrodynamic zoom simulations of 10 massive galaxy c...
Context. Cool-core clusters are characterized by strong surface brightness peaks in the X-ray emissi...
International audienceWe analysed XMM–Newton EPIC data for 53 galaxy clusters. Through 2D spectral m...
X-ray astronomers often divide galaxy clusters into two classes: “cool core” (CC) and “non-cool core...