摘要: A substantial fraction of the cosmic baryons is expected to hide in the form
of diffuse warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM), the majority of which resides
in the filaments of the Cosmic Web and has proven very difficult to detect due
to its low density. Close to galaxy clusters, the filament gas is affected by
the cluster's gravitational potential and attains substantial infall
velocities, eventually undergoing a termination shock which may boost its X-ray
signal. We aim to identify the optimal locations of the enhanced X-ray emission
and absorption arising from cluster-filament interactions, as well as improve
our understanding of the various physical processes affecting the WHIM as it
approaches the cluster. We applied the DisPerSE filament finder to the galaxy
distribution in the surroundings of a Coma-like ($M_{200} \sim 10^{15.4}~{\rm
M}_{\odot}$) simulated C-EAGLE galaxy cluster. We characterised the
thermodynamic properties of the gas in such filaments as well as their
dependence on distance from the cluster, and provided a physical interpretation
for the results. The identified filaments account for $\sim 50$% of the hot
WHIM ($T > 10^{5.5}$ K) in the cluster vicinity. The filament gas is in
approximate free-fall all the way down to $\sim 2 \ r_{200}$ from the cluster,
at which stage it begins to slow down due to the increasing pressure of the
ambient gas. The deceleration is accompanied by the conversion of gas bulk
kinetic energy into heat and the increase of density and temperature from the
general Cosmic Web level of $\rho \sim 10\rho_{\rm av}$ and $T = 10^5-10^6$ K
towards $\rho \sim 100\rho_{\rm av}$ and $T = 10^7-10^8$ K near the cluster
boundary. We conclude that the detection of the cosmic filaments of galaxies
around clusters may provide a practical observational avenue for locating the
densest and hottest phase of the missing baryons.