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The significance of hierarchical clustering on the density profile and mass-temperature scaling relation for galaxy clusters is examined using hydrodynamic N-body simulations. Clusters formed hierarchically are compared with clusters formed with the initial density fluctuations on sub-cluster scales removed via smoothing. The universal profile, as described by Navarro, Frenk, and White, is not a by-product of hierarchical clustering. It is found to fit the mean profiles of clusters formed both hierarchically and otherwise. The Hernquist profile is also found to fit the data well. The characteristic radius, r_s, moves outward from 0.1 R_200 to 0.2 R_200 when the initial substructure is eliminated. Interior to r_s, rho_DM is proportional to r^-1.8, regardless of initial smoothing. Exterior to this radius, the profile is marginally shallower in the non-hierarchical case, with rho_DM proportional to r^-2.4 compared with rho_DM proportional to r^-2.7. The mass-temperature scaling relation maintains the form T proportional to M^2/3, regardless of cluster formation method. The normalisation varies at the 20% level, which is at the level of the intrinsic scatter, with the non-hierarchical simulations producing the cooler clusters.
The baryon fraction of galaxy clusters in numerical simulations is found to be dependant on the cluster formation method. In all cases, the gas is anti-biased compared with the dark matter. However, clusters formed hierarchically are found to be more
Galaxy clusters are excellent probes to study the effect of environment on galaxy formation and evolution. Along with high-quality observational data, accurate cosmological simulations are required to improve our understanding of galaxy evolution in
The lensing signal around galaxy clusters can, in principle, be used to test detailed predictions for their average mass profile from numerical simulations. However, the intrinsic shape of the profiles can be smeared out when a sample that spans a wi
In galaxy clusters, the relations between observables in X-ray and millimeter wave bands and the total mass have normalizations, slopes and redshift evolutions that are simple to estimate in a self-similar scenario. We study these scaling relations a
We fit a functional form for a universal ICM entropy profile to the scaled entropy profiles of a catalogue of X-ray galaxy cluster outskirts results, which are all relaxed cool core clusters at redshift below 0.25. We also investigate the functional