The eROSITA view on the halo mass-temperature relation: From low-mass groups to massive clusters
V. Toptun, P. Popesso, I. Marini, K. Dolag, G. Lamer, X. Yang, Q. Li, B. Csizi, L. Lovisari, S. Ettori, V. Biffi, S. Vladutescu-Zopp, A. Dev, D. Mazengo, A. Merloni, J. Comparat, G. Ponti, E. Bulbul

TL;DR
This study uses eROSITA X-ray data and simulations to analyze the mass-temperature relation of galaxy groups and clusters, confirming temperature as a reliable mass proxy across a broad mass spectrum, including low-mass groups.
Contribution
It extends the mass-temperature relation analysis down to low-mass galaxy groups using eROSITA data and validates the relation with hydrodynamical simulations, supporting temperature as a universal mass proxy.
Findings
Galaxy groups follow the cluster power-law relation in the mass-temperature scaling.
AGN feedback affects baryon distribution more than the temperature in galaxy groups.
Temperature remains a reliable mass proxy across the entire mass range.
Abstract
Galaxy groups and clusters are among the best probes of structure formation and growth in a cosmological context. Most of their baryonic component is dominated by the intracluster medium (ICM), whose thermodynamical properties serve as indicators of the halo's dynamical state and can be used for the halo mass determination in the self-similar scenario. However, baryonic processes, such as AGN feedback and gas cooling, may affect the global properties of the ICM, especially in the group regime. These effects might lead to deviations from self-similar predictions in galaxy groups' scaling relations, while they remain in place for massive galaxy clusters. Additionally, the low-mass end of the scaling relations, ranging from to , remains unclear and poorly populated, as current X-ray surveys detect only the brightest groups. Here, we present the Mass-Temperature…
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