The Effects of Galaxy Shape and Rotation on the X-ray Haloes of Early-Type Galaxies
Silvia Posacki (1), Silvia Pellegrini (1), Luca Ciotti (1) ((1) Dept., of Physics, Astronomy, University of Bologna, Italy)

TL;DR
This study models early-type galaxies to understand how shape and rotation influence their hot X-ray gas temperatures, revealing that rotation and flattening can significantly lower observed temperatures and X-ray luminosities.
Contribution
It introduces axisymmetric galaxy models with varying flattening and rotation to analyze their impact on hot gas temperature and X-ray emission, extending previous spherical models.
Findings
Rotation reduces gas temperature when not thermalized.
Flatter, rotationally supported galaxies tend to have lower X-ray temperatures.
Observed temperatures are consistent with models, showing trends related to galaxy shape and rotation.
Abstract
We present a detailed diagnostic study of the observed temperatures of the hot X-ray coronae of early-type galaxies. By extending the investigation carried out in Pellegrini (2011) with spherical models, we focus on the dependence of the energy budget and temperature of the hot gas on the galaxy structure and internal stellar kinematics. By solving the Jeans equations we construct realistic axisymmetric three-component galaxy models (stars, dark matter halo, central black hole) with different degrees of flattening and rotational support. The kinematical fields are projected along different lines of sight, and the aperture velocity dispersion is computed within a fraction of the circularized effective radius. The model parameters are chosen so that the models resemble real ETGs and lie on the Faber-Jackson and Size-Luminosity relations. For these models we compute T_* (the stellar…
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