Galaxy Infall by Interacting with its Environment: a Comprehensive Study of 340 Galaxy Clusters
Liyi Gu, Zhonglue Wen, Poshak Gandhi, Naohisa Inada, Madoka, Kawaharada, Tadayuki Kodama, Saori Konami, Kazuhiro Nakazawa, Haiguang Xu,, and Kazuo Makishima

TL;DR
This comprehensive study analyzes 340 galaxy clusters to understand the evolution of galaxy, ICM, and dark matter distributions, revealing ongoing galaxy infall and ICM expansion driven by galaxy-ICM interactions.
Contribution
It provides a systematic analysis of the radial distributions and their evolution in galaxy clusters using SDSS and X-ray data, highlighting the role of galaxy-ICM interactions.
Findings
Galaxies, ICM, and dark matter had similar initial distributions.
Galaxies have fallen inward over time, while ICM has expanded.
Energy transfer from galaxies to environment is significant.
Abstract
To study systematically the evolution on the angular extents of the galaxy, ICM, and dark matter components in galaxy clusters, we compiled the optical and X-ray properties of a sample of 340 clusters with redshifts , based on all the available data with the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) and {\it Chandra}/{\it XMM-Newton}. For each cluster, the member galaxies were determined primarily with photometric redshift measurements. The radial ICM mass distribution, as well as the total gravitational mass distribution, were derived from a spatially-resolved spectral analysis of the X-ray data. When normalizing the radial profile of galaxy number to that of the ICM mass, the relative curve was found to depend significantly on the cluster redshift; it drops more steeply towards outside in lower redshift subsamples. The same evolution is found in the galaxy-to-total mass profile, while the…
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