Temperature Profiles of Hot Gas In Early Type Galaxies
Dong-Woo Kim, Liam Traynor, Alessandro Paggi, Ewan O'Sullivan, Craig, Anderson, Douglas Burke, Raffaele D'Abrusco, Giuseppina Fabbiano, Antonella, Fruscione, Jennifer Lauer, Michael McCollough, Douglas Morgan, Amy Mossman,, Saeqa Vrtilek, and Ginevra Trinchieri

TL;DR
This study analyzes hot gas temperature profiles in early type galaxies, proposing a universal profile that describes most cases and exploring the physical processes influencing the temperature distribution.
Contribution
It introduces a universal temperature profile for hot gas in early type galaxies based on Chandra data, accounting for characteristic peaks, dips, and breaks in the profiles.
Findings
The hot gas temperature peaks at ~35 kpc from galaxy centers.
72-82% of galaxies fit the proposed universal profile.
Small galaxies often show a hot core with a negative temperature gradient.
Abstract
Using the data products of the Chandra Galaxy Atlas (Kim et al. 2019a), we have investigated the radial profiles of the hot gas temperature in 60 early type galaxies. Considering the characteristic temperature and radius of the peak, dip, and break (when scaled by the gas temperature and virial radius of each galaxy), we propose a universal temperature profile of the hot halo in ETGs. In this scheme, the hot gas temperature peaks at RMAX = 35 +/- 25 kpc (or ~0.04 RVIR) and declines both inward and outward. The temperature dips (or breaks) at RMIN (or RBREAK) = 3 - 5 kpc (or ~0.006 RVIR). The mean slope between RMIN (RBREAK) and RMAX is 0.3 +/- 0.1. Allowing for selection effects and observational limits, we find that the universal temperature profile can describe the temperature profiles of 72% (possibly up to 82%) of our ETG sample. The remaining ETGs (18%) with irregular or…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
