Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics
Scientific paper
2001-12-06
Astronomy and Astrophysics
Astrophysics
Proceedings of "Tracing Cosmic Evolution with Clusters of Galaxies", Sesto Pusteria, Bolzano, Italy, July 3-6, 2001
Scientific paper
10.1007/10856495_11
Central cool gas component that is often observed from a well-relaxed cluster system has long been interpreted as a consequence of ``Cooling Flow'' (CF), radiative cooling followed by inflow of Intra-Cluster Medium (ICM). However, recent XMM-Newton spectroscopy has shown no signatures of cooler gas phases below certain temperatures in typical CF clusters (A1795, Tamura et al. 2001; A1835, Peterson et al. 2001). This contradicts the conventional CF model or at least requires a major revision of the model. In order to investigate statistical properties of the central cool component, we performed systematic analysis of ASCA data on 85 clusters. We found that 1) temperature of the central cool component strongly depends on the temperature of the main ICM, 2) the cool component is selectively found around a brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) that coincide with the X-ray peak position, and 3) the luminosity-temperature (L-T) relation of the cool component shows nice agreement with the L-T relation of the main ICM. Together with the previous observational fact that, in some of the ``CF'' clusters, the total gravitating mass is clustering in two distinct spatial scales, a main cluster component and a second small-scale system, we conclude that the central cool component is associated with the second small-scale self-gravitating system that is immersed in the host cluster, and the cool component temperature reflects the gravitational potential depth.
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