We use Enzo, a hybrid Eulerian AMR/N-body code including non-gravitational
heating and cooling, to explore the morphology of the X-ray gas in clusters of
galaxies and its evolution in current generation cosmological simulations. We
employ and compare two observationally motivated structure measures: power
ratios and centroid shift. Overall, the structure of our simulated clusters
compares remarkably well to low-redshift observations, although some
differences remain that may point to incomplete gas physics. We find no
dependence on cluster structure in the mass-observable scaling relations, T_X-M
and Y_X-M, when using the true cluster masses. However, estimates of the total
mass based on the assumption of hydrostatic equilibrium, as assumed in
observational studies, are systematically low. We show that the hydrostatic
mass bias strongly correlates with cluster structure and, more weakly, with
cluster mass. When the hydrostatic masses are used, the mass-observable scaling
relations and gas mass fractions depend significantly on cluster morphology,
and the true relations are not recovered even if the most relaxed clusters are
used. We show that cluster structure, via the power ratios, can be used to
effectively correct the hydrostatic mass estimates and mass-scaling relations,
suggesting that we can calibrate for this systematic effect in cosmological
studies. Similar to observational studies, we find that cluster structure,
particularly centroid shift, evolves with redshift. This evolution is mild but
will lead to additional errors at high redshift. Projection along the line of
sight leads to significant uncertainty in the structure of individual clusters:
less than 50% of clusters which appear relaxed in projection based on our
structure measures are truly relaxed.Comment: 57 pages, 18 figures, accepted to ApJ, updated definition of T_X and
M_gas but results unchanged, for version with full resolution figures, see
http://www.ociw.edu/~tesla/sims.ps.g