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Turbulent pressure support and hydrostatic mass-bias in the intracluster medium

Published 13 May 2019 in astro-ph.CO | (1905.04896v2)

Abstract: The degree of turbulent pressure support by residual gas motions in galaxy clusters is not well known. Mass modelling of combined X-ray and Sunyaev Zel'dovich observations provides an estimate of turbulent pressure support in the outer regions of several galaxy clusters. Here, we test two different filtering techniques to disentangle bulk from turbulent motions in non-radiative high-resolution cosmological simulations of galaxy clusters using the cosmological hydro code ENZO. We find that the radial behavior of the ratio of non-thermal pressure to total gas pressure as a function of cluster-centric distance can be described by a simple polynomial function. The typical non-thermal pressure support in the centre of clusters is $\sim$5%, increasing to $\sim$15% in the outskirts, in line with the pressure excess found in recent X-ray observations. While the complex dynamics of the ICM makes it impossible to reconstruct a simple correlation between turbulent motions and hydrostatic bias, we find that a relation between them can be established using the median properties of a sample of objects. Moreover, we estimate the contribution of radial accelerations to the non-thermal pressure support and conclude that it decreases moving outwards from 40% (in the core) to 15% (in the cluster's outskirts). Adding this contribution to one provided by turbulence, we show that it might account for the entire observed hydrostatic bias in the innermost regions of the clusters, and for less than 80% of it at $r > 0.8 r_{200, m}$.

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