The Three-Dimensional Shapes of Galaxy Clusters
Marceau Limousin, Andrea Morandi, Mauro Sereno, Massimo Meneghetti,, Stefano Ettori, Matthias Bartelmann, Tomas Verdugo

TL;DR
This paper reviews the importance of modeling galaxy clusters as triaxial objects rather than spherical, discusses methods for deprojection and data fitting, and presents results showing that triaxial models can resolve certain observational tensions.
Contribution
It introduces a comprehensive parametric framework for fitting multi-wavelength data with triaxial models and highlights the need for consistent analysis in simulations and observations.
Findings
Triaxial models can lower the inferred concentration parameters.
Different data sets lead to varying halo parameters.
Triaxial analysis may alleviate the over-concentration problem.
Abstract
While clusters of galaxies are considered one of the most important cosmological probes, the standard spherical modelling of the dark matter and the intracluster medium is only a rough approximation. Indeed, it is well established both theoretically and observationally that galaxy clusters are much better approximated as triaxial objects. However, investigating the asphericity of galaxy clusters is still in its infancy. We review here this topic which is currently gathering a growing interest from the cluster community. We begin by introducing the triaxial geometry. Then we discuss the topic of deprojection and demonstrate the need for combining different probes of the cluster's potential. We discuss the different works that have been addressing these issues. We present a general parametric framework intended to simultaneously fit complementary data sets (X-ray, Sunyaev Zel'dovich and…
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