The evolution of the spatially-resolved metal abundance in galaxy clusters up to z=1.4
S. Ettori, A. Baldi, I. Balestra, F. Gastaldello, S. Molendi, P. Tozzi

TL;DR
This study analyzes the metal content in 83 galaxy clusters up to redshift 1.4, revealing a decline in core metallicity with redshift and differences between cool-core and non-cool-core clusters, using XMM-Newton data.
Contribution
It provides the most extensive spatially-resolved analysis of metal distribution in galaxy clusters as a function of redshift, highlighting evolution in cool-core regions.
Findings
Metallicity decreases with radius in all clusters.
Significant redshift evolution of core metallicity in cool-core clusters.
No significant evolution observed outside the core regions.
Abstract
We present the combined analysis of the metal content of 83 objects in the redshift range 0.09-1.39, and spatially-resolved in the 3 bins (0-0.15, 0.15-0.4, >0.4) R500, as obtained with similar analysis using XMM-Newton data in Leccardi & Molendi (2008) and Baldi et al. (2012). We use the pseudo-entropy ratio to separate the Cool-Core (CC) cluster population, where the central gas density tends to be relatively higher, cooler and more metal rich, from the Non-Cool-Core systems. The average, redshift-independent, metal abundance measured in the 3 radial bins decrease moving outwards, with a mean metallicity in the core that is even 3 (two) times higher than the value of 0.16 times the solar abundance in Anders & Grevesse (1989) estimated at r>0.4 R500 in CC (NCC) objects. We find that the values of the emission-weighted metallicity are well-fitted by the relation $Z(z) = Z_0…
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