Self-similarity of temperature profiles in distant galaxy clusters: the quest for a Universal law
Alessandro Baldi, Stefano Ettori, Silvano Molendi, Fabio Gastaldello

TL;DR
This study analyzes temperature profiles of distant galaxy clusters, revealing self-similarity, differences between cool-core and non cool-core clusters, and potential evolution with redshift, aiming to identify a universal law.
Contribution
It provides the first systematic analysis of galaxy cluster temperature profiles at z>0.4, establishing a relation to a universal profile considering cluster relaxation and redshift.
Findings
Profiles are generally self-similar when normalized.
CC and NCC clusters differ mainly in central regions.
Temperature profiles show evolution with redshift.
Abstract
We present the XMM-Newton temperature profiles of 12 bright clusters of galaxies at 0.4<z<0.9, with 5<kT<11 keV. The normalized temperature profiles (normalized by the mean temperature T500) are found to be generally self-similar. The sample was subdivided in 5 cool-core (CC) and 7 non cool-core (NCC) clusters, by introducing a pseudo-entropy ratio sigma=(T_IN/T_OUT)X(EM_IN/EM_OUT)^-1/3 and defining the objects with sigma<0.6 as CC clusters and those with sigma>=0.6 as NCC clusters. The profiles of CC and NCC clusters differ mainly in the central regions, with the latters exhibiting a marginally flatter central profile. A significant dependence of the temperature profiles on the pseudo-entropy ratio sigma is detected by fitting a function of both r and sigma, showing an indication that the outer part of the profiles becomes steeper for higher values of sigma (i.e. transitioning towards…
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