The Hot Interstellar Medium in Normal Elliptical Galaxies III: The Thermal Structure of the Gas
Steven Diehl (LANL), Thomas S. Statler (Ohio University)

TL;DR
This study analyzes X-ray data from 36 elliptical galaxies to classify their hot gas temperature profiles, revealing environmental and intrinsic factors influencing the thermal structure and proposing models for the observed gradients.
Contribution
It provides a detailed classification of temperature profiles in elliptical galaxies and links these profiles to galaxy properties and environment, offering new insights into the heating mechanisms of the interstellar medium.
Findings
Outer temperature gradients are environment-dependent.
Inner gradients correlate with galaxy luminosity and radio activity.
No bimodality found in gradient distributions.
Abstract
This is the third paper in a series analyzing X-ray emission from the hot interstellar medium in a sample of 54 normal elliptical galaxies observed by Chandra, focusing on 36 galaxies with sufficient signal to compute radial temperature profiles. We distinguish four qualitatively different types of profile: positive gradient (outwardly rising), negative gradients (falling), quasi-isothermal (flat) and hybrid (falling at small radii, then rising). We measure the mean logarithmic temperature gradients in two radial regions: from 0--2 -band effective radii (excluding the central point source), and from 2--. We find the outer gradient to be uncorrelated with intrinsic host galaxy properties, but strongly influenced by the environment: galaxies in low-density environments tend to show negative outer gradients, while those in high-density environments show positive outer…
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