Gas entropy in a representative sample of nearby X-ray galaxy clusters (REXCESS): relationship to gas mass fraction
G.W. Pratt (CEA Saclay, MPE), M. Arnaud, R. Piffaretti, H., Boehringer, T.J. Ponman, J.H. Croston, G.M. Voit, S. Borgani, R.G. Bower

TL;DR
This study analyzes the entropy distribution in 31 nearby galaxy clusters, revealing how entropy varies with radius and mass, and linking gas mass fraction to entropy properties, with implications for understanding cluster evolution.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive analysis of entropy profiles in a representative sample of galaxy clusters, highlighting the role of gas mass fraction and dynamical activity.
Findings
Entropy excess is greater and extends further in lower mass systems.
Scaling of entropy is shallower in inner regions and steepens with radius.
Gas mass fraction variations largely explain entropy distribution differences.
Abstract
(Abridged) We examine the radial entropy distribution and its scaling using 31 nearby galaxy clusters from the Representative XMM-Newton Cluster Structure Survey (REXCESS). The entropy profiles are robustly measured at least out to R_1000 in all systems and out to R_500 in 13 systems. Compared to theoretical expectations, the observed distributions show a radial and mass-dependent excess entropy that is greater and extends to larger radii in lower mass systems. At R_500, the mass dependence and entropy excess are both negligible within the uncertainties. Mirroring this behaviour, the scaling of gas entropy is shallower than self-similar in the inner regions, but steepens with radius, becoming consistent with self-similar at R_500. The dispersion in scaled entropy in the inner regions is linked to the presence of cool cores and dynamical activity; at larger radii the dispersion decreases…
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