Bandpass Dependence of X-ray Temperatures in Galaxy Clusters
Kenneth W. Cavagnolo, Megan Donahue, G. Mark Voit, and Ming Sun

TL;DR
This study investigates how the inferred X-ray temperature of galaxy clusters depends on the energy band used, revealing that merging clusters show a larger temperature discrepancy indicative of cooler gas components.
Contribution
It introduces a diagnostic method based on band-dependent temperature ratios to detect unresolved cool gas in galaxy clusters using existing X-ray spectral data.
Findings
Hard-band temperatures are generally higher than broad-band temperatures.
Merging clusters show a larger temperature ratio than relaxed clusters.
The diagnostic is sensitive to cool gas components with significant emission measures.
Abstract
We explore the band dependence of the inferred X-ray temperature of the intracluster medium (ICM) for 192 well-observed galaxy clusters selected from the Chandra Data Archive. If the hot ICM is nearly isothermal in the projected region of interest, the X-ray temperature inferred from a broad-band (0.7-7.0 keV) spectrum should be identical to the X-ray temperature inferred from a hard-band (2.0-7.0 keV) spectrum. However, if unresolved cool lumps of gas are contributing soft X-ray emission, the temperature of a best-fit single-component thermal model will be cooler for the broad-band spectrum than for the hard-band spectrum. Using this difference as a diagnostic, the ratio of best-fitting hard-band and broad-band temperatures may indicate the presence of cooler gas even when the X-ray spectrum itself may not have sufficient signal-to-noise to resolve multiple temperature components. To…
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