Skip to main content

Azimuthally resolved X-ray spectroscopy to the edge of the Perseus Cluster

Article

Publications

Complete Citation

Overview

Abstract

  • We present the results from extensive, new observations of the Perseus Cluster of galaxies, obtained as a Suzaku Key Project. The 85 pointings analysed span eight azimuthal directions out to 2° = 2.6 Mpc, to and beyond the virial radius r200 ˜ 1.8 Mpc, offering the most detailed X-ray measurements of the intracluster medium (ICM) at large radii in any cluster to date. The azimuthally averaged density profile for r > 0.4r200 is relatively flat, with a best-fitting power-law index δ = 1.69 ± 0.13, significantly smaller than expected from numerical simulations. The entropy profile in the outskirts lies systematically below the power-law behaviour expected from large-scale structure formation models which include only the heating associated with gravitational collapse. Conversely, the pressure profile beyond ˜0.6r200 shows an excess with respect to the best-fitting model describing the SZ measurements for a sample of clusters observed with the Planck satellite. The differences between the expected and measured density, entropy and pressure profiles can be explained by a systematic overestimation of the ICM density at large radii caused by homogeneous modelling of inhomogeneous gas distributions (i.e. gas clumping), with the density overestimates ranging from factors of ˜1.2 to 2 or more at r200 along different directions. We find no evidence for a bias in the temperature measurements within the virial radius. Along the cluster minor axis, we find a flattening of the entropy profiles outside ˜0.6r200, while along the major axis, the entropy rises all the way to the outskirts.

Publication Date

  • 2014

Authors