Entropy scaling in galaxy clusters: insights from an XMM-Newton observation of the poor cluster A1983

Abstract

An XMM-Newton observation of the cool (kT=2.1 keV) cluster A1983, at z=0.044, is presented. Gas density and temperature profiles are calculated for the inner 500 h50-1 kpc (~0.35 r200). The outer regions of the surface brightness profile are well described with a beta model with beta=0.74, but the central regions require the introduction of a second component. The temperature profile is flat at the exterior with a slight dip towards the centre. The total mass profile, calculated assuming hydrostatic equilibrium, is consistent with an NFW profile, but with a low concentration parameter c=3.75 +/- 0.74. The M/LB ratio profile shows that, at large scale, light traces mass to a reasonable extent, and the M/LB ratio at 0.35 r200 is consistent with the trends with mass observed in the optical. The MFe/LB ratio is about two times less than that observed for a cluster at 5 keV. The gas mass fraction rises rapidly to level off at ~200 kpc; the value at 0.35 r200 is ~8%. The scaling properties of the emission measure profile are consistent with the empirical relation 1.94, and not with the self-similar relation 1.5. Comparison of the entropy profile of A1983 with that of the hot cluster A1413 shows that the profiles are well scaled using the empirically determined relation S 0.65, suggesting that the slope of the S-T relation is shallower than in the self-similar model. The form of the entropy profiles is remarkably similar, and there is no sign of a larger isentropic core in the cooler cluster. These data provide powerful agruments against preheating models. In turn, there is now increasing observational support for a trend of fgas with system mass, which may go some way towards explaining the observed scaling behaviour. (Abridged.)

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