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We report results from the analysis of 21 nearby galaxy clusters, 11 with cooling flow (CF) and 10 without cooling flow, observed with BeppoSAX. The temperature profiles of both CF and non-CF systems are characterized by an isothermal core extending out to 0.2 r_180; beyond this radius both CF and non-CF cluster profiles rapidly decline. Our results differ from those derived by other authors who either found continuously declining profiles or substantially flat profiles. Neither the CF nor the non-CF profiles can be modeled by a polytropic temperature profile, the reason being that the radius at which the profiles break is much larger than the core radius characterizing the gas density profiles. For r > 0.2 r_180, where the gas can be treated as a polytrope, the polytropic indices derived for CF and non-CF systems are respectively 1.20 +/- 0.06 and 1.46 +/- 0.06. The former index is closer to the isothermal value, 1, and the latter to the adiabatic value, 5/3. Published hydrodynamic simulations do not reproduce the peculiar shape of the observed temperature profile, probably suggesting that a fundamental ingredient is missing.
We present ASCA temperature profiles and, when possible, crude temperature maps for a sample of bright clusters with 0.04<z<0.09. Together with several previously published clusters, the sample includes A85, A119, A399, A401, A478, A644, A754, A780,
We present Chandra gas temperature profiles at large radii for a sample of 13 nearby, relaxed galaxy clusters and groups, which includes A133, A262, A383, A478, A907, A1413, A1795, A1991, A2029, A2390, MKW4, RXJ1159+5531, and USGC S152. The sample co
A study of the structural and scaling properties of the temperature distribution of the hot, X-ray emitting intra-cluster medium of galaxy clusters, and its dependence on dynamical state, can give insights into the physical processes governing the fo
We derive here the mean temperature profile for a sample of hot, medium distant clusters recently observed with XMM-Newton, whose profiles are available from the literature, and compare it with the mean temperature profile found from BeppoSAX data. T
We investigate temperature and entropy profiles of 13 nearby cooling flow clusters observed with the EPIC cameras of XMM-Newton. When normalized and scaled by the virial radius the temperature profiles turn out to be remarkably similar. At large radi