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Observational Tests of the Mass-Temperature Relation for Galaxy Clusters

Donald J. Horner, Richard F. Mushotzky, Caleb A. Scharf

Published 1999-02-10Version 1

We examine the relationship between the mass and x-ray gas temperature of galaxy clusters using data drawn from the literature. Simple theoretical arguments suggest that the mass of a cluster is related to the x-ray temperature as $M \propto T_x^{3/2}$. Virial theorem mass estimates based on cluster galaxy velocity dispersions seem to be accurately described by this scaling with a normalization consistent with that predicted by the simulations of Evrard, Metzler, & Navarro (1996). X-ray mass estimates which employ spatially resolved temperature profiles also follow a $T_x^{3/2}$ scaling although with a normalization about 40% lower than that of the fit to the virial masses. However, the isothermal $\beta$-model and x-ray surface brightness deprojection masses follow a steeper $\propto T_x^{1.8-2.0}$ scaling. The steepness of the isothermal estimates is due to their implicitly assumed dark matter density profile of $\rho(r) \propto r^{-2}$ at large radii while observations and simulations suggest that clusters follow steeper profiles (e.g., $\rho(r) \propto r^{-2.4}$).

Comments: 25 pages, 10 figures, accepted by ApJ
Journal: Astrophys.J. 520 (1999) 78-86
Categories: astro-ph
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