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Hydrostatic mass profiles in X-COP galaxy clusters.

Authors :
Ettori, S.
Ghirardini, V.
Eckert, D.
Pointecouteau, E.
Gastaldello, F.
Sereno, M.
Gaspari, M.
Ghizzardi, S.
Roncarelli, M.
Rossetti, M.
Source :
Astronomy & Astrophysics / Astronomie et Astrophysique; Jan2019, Vol. 621, pN.PAG-N.PAG, 13p
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Aims. We present the reconstruction of hydrostatic mass profiles in 13 X-ray luminous galaxy clusters that have been mapped in their X-ray and Sunyaev–Zeldovich (SZ) signals out to R<subscript>200</subscript> for the XMM-Newton Cluster Outskirts Project (X-COP). Methods. Using profiles of the gas temperature, density, and pressure that have been spatially resolved out to median values of 0.9R<subscript>500</subscript>, 1.8R<subscript>500</subscript>, and 2.3R<subscript>500</subscript>, respectively, we are able to recover the hydrostatic gravitating mass profile with several methods and using different mass models. Results. The hydrostatic masses are recovered with a relative (statistical) median error of 3% at R<subscript>500</subscript> and 6% at R<subscript>200</subscript>. By using several different methods to solve the equation of the hydrostatic equilibrium, we evaluate some of the systematic uncertainties to be of the order of 5% at both R<subscript>500</subscript> and R<subscript>200</subscript>. A Navarro-Frenk-White profile provides the best-fit in 9 cases out of 13; the remaining 4 cases do not show a statistically significant tension with it. The distribution of the mass concentration follows the correlations with the total mass predicted from numerical simulations with a scatter of 0.18 dex, with an intrinsic scatter on the hydrostatic masses of 0.15 dex. We compare them with the estimates of the total gravitational mass obtained through X-ray scaling relations applied to Y<subscript>X</subscript>, gas fraction, and Y<subscript>SZ</subscript>, and from weak lensing and galaxy dynamics techniques, and measure a substantial agreement with the results from scaling laws, from WL at both R<subscript>500</subscript> and R<subscript>200</subscript> (with differences below 15%), from cluster velocity dispersions. Instead, we find a significant tension with the caustic masses that tend to underestimate the hydrostatic masses by 40% at R<subscript>200</subscript>. We also compare these measurements with predictions from alternative models to the cold dark matter, like the emergent gravity and MOND scenarios, confirming that the latter underestimates hydrostatic masses by 40% at R<subscript>1000</subscript>, with a decreasing tension as the radius increases, and reaches ∼15% at R<subscript>200</subscript>, whereas the former reproduces M<subscript>500</subscript> within 10%, but overestimates M<subscript>200</subscript> by about 20%. Conclusions. The unprecedented accuracy of these hydrostatic mass profiles out to R<subscript>200</subscript> allows us to assess the level of systematic errors in the hydrostatic mass reconstruction method, to evaluate the intrinsic scatter in the NFW c − M relation, and to robustly quantify differences among different mass models, different mass proxies, and different gravity scenarios. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00046361
Volume :
621
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Astronomy & Astrophysics / Astronomie et Astrophysique
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
134782314
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201833323