Steepening mass profiles, dark matter and environment of X-ray bright elliptical galaxies
Payel Das, Ortwin Gerhard, Eugene Churazov, Irina Zhuravleva

TL;DR
This study employs a Bayesian non-parametric method to derive mass profiles of X-ray bright elliptical galaxies, revealing rising outer circular velocity curves, significant dark matter content, and environmental correlations.
Contribution
It introduces a new non-parametric Bayesian approach to accurately determine galaxy mass distributions from X-ray data, accounting for non-thermal pressures and gas complexities.
Findings
Circular velocity curves rise in outer regions due to temperature and pressure gradients.
Dark matter fractions range from 35% to 90% at different radii.
Galaxy properties strongly correlate with local environmental velocity dispersion.
Abstract
We use a new non-parametric Bayesian approach to obtain the most probable mass distributions and circular velocity curves along with their confidence ranges, given deprojected density and temperature profiles of the hot gas surrounding X-ray bright elliptical galaxies. For a sample of six X-ray bright ellipticals, we find that all circular velocity curves are rising in the outer parts due to a combination of a rising temperature profile and a logarithmic pressure gradient that increases in magnitude. Comparing the circular velocity curves we obtain from X-rays to those obtained from dynamical models, we find that the former are often lower in the central ~10 kpc. This is probably due to a combination of: i) Non-thermal contributions of up to ~35% in the pressure (with stronger effects in NGC 4486), ii) multiple-temperature components in the hot gas, iii) incomplete kinematic spatial…
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