Back to Explorer
Research PaperResearchia:202602.02034[Energy Technology > Environmental Science]

How supermassive black holes shape central entropies in galaxy clusters

Rainer Weinberger

Abstract

A significant fraction of galaxy clusters show central cooling times of less than 1 Gyr and associated central cluster entropies below 30keVcm230\,\mathrm{keV}\,\mathrm{cm}^2. We provide a straight forward explanation for these low central entropies in cool core systems and how this is related to accretion onto supermassive black holes (SMBHs). Assuming a time-averaged equilibrium between active galactic nucleus (AGN) jet heating of the radiatively cooling intracluster medium (ICM) as well as Bondi accretion, we derive an equilibrium entropy that scales with the SMBH and cluster mass as KM4/3M500c1K\propto M_\bullet^{4/3}M_{500\mathrm{c}}^{-1}. At fixed cluster mass, overly massive SMBHs would raise the central entropy above the cool core threshold, thus implying a novel way of limiting SMBH masses in cool core clusters. We find a limiting mass of 1.4×1010M1.4\times10^{10}\,\mathrm{M}_\odot in a cool core cluster of mass 1015M10^{15}\,\mathrm{M}_\odot. We carry out three-dimensional hydrodynamical simulations of an idealized Perseus-like cluster with AGN jets and find that they reproduce the predictions of our analytic model, once corrections for elevated jet entropies are applied in calculating X-ray emissivity-weighted cluster entropies. Our findings have significant implications for modelling galaxy clusters in cosmological simulations: a combination of overmassive SMBHs and high heating efficiencies preclude the formation of cool core clusters.

Topic Context: AI‑driven power grids, solid‑state batteries, and next-gen solar.


Source: arXiv PDF: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2601.20932v1

Submission:2/2/2026
Comments:0 comments
Subjects:Environmental Science; Energy Technology
Original Source:
View Original PDF
arXiv: This paper is hosted on arXiv, an open-access repository
Was this helpful?

Discussion (0)

Please sign in to join the discussion.

No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!