Testing hydrostatic equilibrium in galaxy cluster MS 2137
I-Non Tim Chiu, Sandor M. Molnar

TL;DR
This study tests the hydrostatic equilibrium assumption in galaxy cluster MS 2137 using X-ray and lensing data, revealing significant non-thermal pressure contributions and the impact of cluster shape on equilibrium assessments.
Contribution
It demonstrates the effect of elliptical geometry on hydrostatic equilibrium analysis and quantifies non-thermal pressure support in a relaxed galaxy cluster.
Findings
Non-thermal pressure contributes 40-50% in the core.
Elliptical models reduce the non-thermal pressure needed.
MS 2137 is close to hydrostatic equilibrium outside the core.
Abstract
We test the assumption of strict hydrostatic equilibrium in galaxy cluster MS2137.3-2353 (MS 2137) using the latest CHANDRA X-ray observations and results from a combined strong and weak lensing analysis based on optical observations. We deproject the two-dimensional X-ray surface brightness and mass surface density maps assuming spherical and spheroidal dark matter distributions. We find a significant, 40%-50%, contribution from non-thermal pressure in the core assuming a spherical model. This non-thermal pressure support is similar to what was found by Molnar et al. (2010) using a sample of massive relaxed clusters drawn from high resolution cosmological simulations. We have studied hydrostatic equilibrium in MS 2137 under the assumption of elliptical cluster geometry adopting prolate models for the dark matter density distribution with different axis ratios. Our results suggest that…
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