Abstract
We investigate the predicted present-day temperature profiles of the hot, X-ray-emitting gas in galaxy clusters for two cosmological models - a current best-guess ACDM model and a standard cold dark matter (SCDM) model. Our numerically simulated catalogs of clusters are derived from high-resolution (15 h-1kpc) simulations which make use of a sophisticated, Eulerian-based, adaptive mesh-refinement code that faithfully captures the shocks that are essential for correctly modeling cluster temperatures. We show that the temperature structure on Mpc scales is highly complex and non-isothermal. However, the temperature profiles of the simulated ACDM and SCDM clusters are remarkably similar and drop off as T ∝ (1 + r/ax)-δ, where ax∼ rvir/1.5 and δ ∼ 1.6. This decrease is in good agreement with the observational results of Markevitch et al. but diverges, primarily in the innermost regions, from their fit which assumes a polytropic equation of state. Our result is also in good agreement with a recent sample of clusters observed by BeppoSAX, though there is some indication of missing physics at small radii (r < 0.2 rvir). We discuss the interpretation of our results and make predictions for new X-ray observations that will extend to larger radii than previously possible. Finally, we show that for r > 0.2 rriv, our universal temperature profile is consistent with our most recent simulations, which include both radiative cooling and supernovae feedback.
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CITATION STYLE
Loken, C., Norman, M. L., Nelson, E., Burns, J., Bryan, G. L., & Motl, P. (2002). A Universal Temperature Profile for Galaxy Clusters. The Astrophysical Journal, 579(2), 571–576. https://doi.org/10.1086/342825
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