Non-Equilibrium Electrons in the Outskirts of Galaxy Clusters
Camille Avestruz, Daisuke Nagai, Erwin T. Lau, Kaylea Nelson

TL;DR
This paper investigates how non-equilibrium electrons in galaxy cluster outskirts cause temperature biases, affecting mass estimates and cosmological measurements, using high-resolution simulations and mock X-ray observations.
Contribution
It presents a mass-dependent model for electron-ion temperature bias in galaxy clusters, highlighting its impact on mass estimates and observable properties.
Findings
Temperature bias can reach 40% at the cluster edge.
Bias is more significant in massive, rapidly accreting clusters.
Azimuthal variations in temperature bias are detectable with deep X-ray observations.
Abstract
The analysis of X-ray and Sunyaev-Zel\'dovich measurements of the intracluster medium (ICM) assumes that electrons are in thermal equilibrium with ions in the plasma. However, electron-ion equilibration timescales can be comparable to the Hubble time in the low density galaxy cluster outskirts, leading to differences between the electron and ion temperatures. This temperature difference can lead to systematic biases in cluster mass estimates and mass-observable scaling relations. To quantify the impact of non-equilibrium electrons on the ICM profiles in cluster outskirts, we use a high resolution cosmological simulation with a two-temperature model assuming the Spitzer equilibration timescale for the electrons. First, we show how the radial profile of this temperature bias depends on both the mass and mass accretion rate of the cluster; the bias is most pronounced in the most massive…
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