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Galaxy clusters: laboratories for extreme plasma physics
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School of Physics CRA Seminar Series: Dr. Brian W. O'Shea, Michigan State University
Galaxy clusters are the most massive virialized objects in the universe, and have the potential to be highly accurate probes of cosmological parameters. A fundamental challenge for cluster cosmology is to estimate the masses of these objects using observational proxies such as X-ray luminosity and temperature, which are complicated by the merger history of clusters and the microphysical properties of the intracluster medium. These effects, while frustrating to cosmologists, provide a rich laboratory for exploring the plasma physical processes that are occurring in these massive objects. In this talk I will present recent efforts to understand the effects that several plasma processes - including conduction and AGN feedback - have on the observable properties of galaxy clusters.
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- Workflow Status:Published
- Created By:Alison Morain
- Created:12/09/2014
- Modified By:Fletcher Moore
- Modified:10/07/2016
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