Core Structure of Intracluster Gas: Isothermal Hydrostatic Equilibrium
Abstract
We investigate core structures of X-ray emitting intracluster gas based on the so-called beta-model, which is an isothermal hydrostatic model often used in observational studies. We reconsider the beta-model and find that the virial temperature Tvir of a cluster may be represented better by beta TX than TX, where beta is the parameter obtained from the X-ray surface brightness and TX is the emission-weighted mean temperature of the gas. We investigate 121 clusters observed by ROSAT and ASCA and find that the luminosity-temperature relation LX - beta TX is less steep than LX - TX. We classify the clusters into two core-size groups in order to investigate their properties in detail. While in the larger core group the core radius is marginally proportional to the virial radius, no significant relation is found for the smaller core group. This may suggest that the smaller cores reflect the presence of cD galaxies, effect of radiative cooling or asymmetry in the surface brightness. We examine such possibilities, and find that the clusters of smaller cores have shorter cooling time than the Hubble time, while no significant correlation is found with cD or asymmetry. We carry out hydrodynamical calculations to simulate the beta-model, intending to see the behavior of the isothermal gas under the gravitational potential including the dark matter and galaxies with or without a central cD galaxy. Calculations show rc rvir and Tvir beta T consistently with our consideration to the beta-model. Also is found from calculations that the presence of a large cD galaxy may form a gas core 40 kpc, which seems too small to account for the range of the core sizes, 40--80 kpc, of the smaller core group.
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