We present a Chandra analysis of the X-ray spectra of 56 clusters of galaxies
at z>0.3, which cover a temperature range of 3>kT>15 keV. Our analysis
is aimed at measuring the iron abundance in the ICM out to the highest redshift
probed to date. We find that the emission-weighted iron abundance measured
within (0.15−0.3)Rvir in clusters below 5 keV is, on average, a factor of
∼2 higher than in hotter clusters, following Z(T)≃0.88T−0.47Z⊙, which confirms the trend seen in local samples. We made use of
combined spectral analysis performed over five redshift bins at 0.3>z>1.3
to estimate the average emission weighted iron abundance. We find a constant
average iron abundance ZFe≃0.25Z⊙ as a function of redshift,
but only for clusters at z>0.5. The emission-weighted iron abundance is
significantly higher (ZFe≃0.4Z⊙) in the redshift range
z≃0.3−0.5, approaching the value measured locally in the inner 0.15Rvir radii for a mix of cool-core and non cool-core clusters in the
redshift range 0.1<z<0.3. The decrease in ZFe with z can be
parametrized by a power law of the form ∼(1+z)−1.25. The observed
evolution implies that the average iron content of the ICM at the present epoch
is a factor of ∼2 larger than at z≃1.2. We confirm that the ICM is
already significantly enriched (ZFe≃0.25Z⊙) at a look-back time
of 9 Gyr. Our data provide significant constraints on the time scales and
physical processes that drive the chemical enrichment of the ICM.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, to appear in the Proceedings of "The Extreme
Universe in the Suzaku Era", Dicember 2006, Kyoto (Japan