Self-similar scaling and evolution in the galaxy cluster X-ray Luminosity-Temperature relation
B. J. Maughan (1), P. A. Giles (1), S. W. Randall (2), C. Jones (2), and W. R. Forman (2) ((1) University of Bristol, (2) Harvard-Smithsonian, Center for Astrophysics)

TL;DR
This study analyzes the X-ray luminosity-temperature relation of galaxy clusters, revealing self-similar behavior in relaxed clusters outside cores and deviations in unrelaxed ones, with implications for cluster evolution and energy input models.
Contribution
It demonstrates the self-similar scaling of relaxed clusters' gas profiles and identifies deviations in unrelaxed clusters, highlighting the role of non-gravitational processes.
Findings
Relaxed clusters follow a self-similar LT relation outside cores.
Unrelaxed clusters show steeper LT slopes, indicating additional energy inputs.
Self-similar evolution cannot be ruled out due to potential selection biases.
Abstract
We investigate the form and evolution of the X-ray luminosity-temperature (LT) relation of a sample of 114 galaxy clusters observed with Chandra at 0.1<z<1.3. The clusters were divided into subsamples based on their X-ray morphology or whether they host strong cool cores. We find that when the core regions are excluded, the most relaxed clusters (or those with the strongest cool cores) follow an LT relation with a slope that agrees well with simple self-similar expectations. This is supported by an analysis of the gas density profiles of the systems, which shows self-similar behaviour of the gas profiles of the relaxed clusters outside the core regions. By comparing our data with clusters in the REXCESS sample, which extends to lower masses, we find evidence that the self-similar behaviour of even the most relaxed clusters breaks at around 3.5keV. By contrast, the LT slopes of the…
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