Weighing the Giants V: Galaxy Cluster Scaling Relations
Adam B. Mantz (1), Steven W. Allen (1), R. Glenn Morris (1), Anja von, der Linden (2), Douglas E. Applegate (3), Patrick L. Kelly (4), David L., Burke (1), David Donovan (5), Harald Ebeling (5) ((1) KIPAC Stanford/SLAC,, (2) Stony Brook, (3) Bonn, (4) UC Berkeley, (5) IfA Hawaii)

TL;DR
This paper analyzes galaxy cluster scaling relations using weak lensing data, accounting for selection effects, and reveals new insights into cluster physics, evolution, and implications for cosmology.
Contribution
It provides the first simultaneous analysis of scaling relations with selection effects and lensing data, revealing new features and testing models against observations.
Findings
Scaling relations agree with previous studies and suggest core-limited deviations.
Detected a positive correlation between luminosity and temperature scatters.
Observed evolution in scatter with redshift, related to cool cores and mergers.
Abstract
We present constraints on the scaling relations of galaxy cluster X-ray luminosity, temperature and gas mass (and derived quantities) with mass and redshift, employing masses from robust weak gravitational lensing measurements. These are the first such results obtained from an analysis that simultaneously accounts for selection effects and the underlying mass function, and directly incorporates lensing data to constrain total masses. Our constraints on the scaling relations and their intrinsic scatters are in good agreement with previous studies, and reinforce a picture in which departures from self-similar scaling laws are primarily limited to cluster cores. However, the data are beginning to reveal new features that have implications for cluster astrophysics and provide new tests for hydrodynamical simulations. We find a positive correlation in the intrinsic scatters of luminosity and…
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