scholarly journals LoCuSS: comparison of observed X-ray and lensing galaxy cluster scaling relations with simulations

2008 ◽  
Vol 482 (2) ◽  
pp. 451-472 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y.-Y. Zhang ◽  
A. Finoguenov ◽  
H. Böhringer ◽  
J.-P. Kneib ◽  
G. P. Smith ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 636 ◽  
pp. A15 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Migkas ◽  
G. Schellenberger ◽  
T. H. Reiprich ◽  
F. Pacaud ◽  
M. E. Ramos-Ceja ◽  
...  

The isotropy of the late Universe and consequently of the X-ray galaxy cluster scaling relations is an assumption greatly used in astronomy. However, within the last decade, many studies have reported deviations from isotropy when using various cosmological probes; a definitive conclusion has yet to be made. New, effective and independent methods to robustly test the cosmic isotropy are of crucial importance. In this work, we use such a method. Specifically, we investigate the directional behavior of the X-ray luminosity-temperature (LX–T) relation of galaxy clusters. A tight correlation is known to exist between the luminosity and temperature of the X-ray-emitting intracluster medium of galaxy clusters. While the measured luminosity depends on the underlying cosmology through the luminosity distance DL, the temperature can be determined without any cosmological assumptions. By exploiting this property and the homogeneous sky coverage of X-ray galaxy cluster samples, one can effectively test the isotropy of cosmological parameters over the full extragalactic sky, which is perfectly mirrored in the behavior of the normalization A of the LX–T relation. To do so, we used 313 homogeneously selected X-ray galaxy clusters from the Meta-Catalogue of X-ray detected Clusters of galaxies. We thoroughly performed additional cleaning in the measured parameters and obtain core-excised temperature measurements for all of the 313 clusters. The behavior of the LX–T relation heavily depends on the direction of the sky, which is consistent with previous studies. Strong anisotropies are detected at a ≳4σ confidence level toward the Galactic coordinates (l, b) ∼ (280°, − 20°), which is roughly consistent with the results of other probes, such as Supernovae Ia. Several effects that could potentially explain these strong anisotropies were examined. Such effects are, for example, the X-ray absorption treatment, the effect of galaxy groups and low redshift clusters, core metallicities, and apparent correlations with other cluster properties, but none is able to explain the obtained results. Analyzing 105 bootstrap realizations confirms the large statistical significance of the anisotropic behavior of this sky region. Interestingly, the two cluster samples previously used in the literature for this test appear to have a similar behavior throughout the sky, while being fully independent of each other and of our sample. Combining all three samples results in 842 different galaxy clusters with luminosity and temperature measurements. Performing a joint analysis, the final anisotropy is further intensified (∼5σ), toward (l, b) ∼ (303°, − 27°), which is in very good agreement with other cosmological probes. The maximum variation of DL seems to be ∼16 ± 3% for different regions in the sky. This result demonstrates that X-ray studies that assume perfect isotropy in the properties of galaxy clusters and their scaling relations can produce strongly biased results whether the underlying reason is cosmological or related to X-rays. The identification of the exact nature of these anisotropies is therefore crucial for any statistical cluster physics or cosmology study.


2010 ◽  
Vol 408 (4) ◽  
pp. 2213-2233 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. J. Short ◽  
P. A. Thomas ◽  
O. E. Young ◽  
F. R. Pearce ◽  
A. Jenkins ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 642 ◽  
pp. L3
Author(s):  
X. Zhang ◽  
A. Simionescu ◽  
J. S. Kaastra ◽  
H. Akamatsu ◽  
D. N. Hoang ◽  
...  

We present an analysis of archival Chandra data of the merging galaxy cluster ClG 0217+70. The Fe XXV Heα X-ray emission line is clearly visible in the 25 ks observation, allowing a precise determination of the redshift of the cluster as z = 0.180 ± 0.006. We measure kT500 = 8.3  ±  0.4 keV and estimate M500 = (1.06 ± 0.11) × 1015 M⊙ based on existing scaling relations. Correcting both the radio and X-ray luminosities with the revised redshift reported here, which is much larger than previously inferred based on sparse optical data, this object is no longer an X-ray underluminous outlier in the LX − Pradio scaling relation. The new redshift also means that, in terms of physical scale, ClG 0217+70 hosts one of the largest radio halos and one of the largest radio relics known to date. Most of the relic candidates lie in projection beyond r200. The X-ray morphological parameters suggest that the intracluster medium is still dynamically disturbed. Two X-ray surface brightness discontinuities are confirmed in the northern and southern parts of the cluster, with density jumps of 1.40 ± 0.16 and 3.0 ± 0.6, respectively. We also find a 700 × 200 kpc X-ray faint channel in the western part of the cluster, which may correspond to compressed heated gas or increased non-thermal pressure due to turbulence or magnetic fields.


Author(s):  
Myles A Mitchell ◽  
Christian Arnold ◽  
Baojiu Li

Abstract We test two methods, including one that is newly proposed in this work, for correcting for the effects of chameleon f(R) gravity on the scaling relations between the galaxy cluster mass and four observable proxies. Using the first suite of cosmological simulations that simultaneously incorporate both full physics of galaxy formation and Hu-Sawicki f(R) gravity, we find that these rescaling methods work with a very high accuracy for the gas temperature, the Compton Y-parameter of the Sunyaev-Zel’dovich (SZ) effect and the X-ray analogue of the Y-parameter. This allows the scaling relations in f(R) gravity to be mapped to their ΛCDM counterparts to within a few percent. We confirm that a simple analytical tanh formula for the ratio between the dynamical and true masses of haloes in chameleon f(R) gravity, proposed and calibrated using dark-matter-only simulations in a previous work, works equally well for haloes identified in simulations with two very different – full-physics and non-radiative – baryonic models. The mappings of scaling relations can be computed using this tanh formula, which depends on the halo mass, redshift and size of the background scalar field, also at a very good accuracy. Our results can be used for accurate determination of the cluster mass using SZ and X-ray observables, and will form part of a general framework for unbiased and self-consistent tests of gravity using data from present and upcoming galaxy cluster surveys. We also propose an alternative test of gravity, using the YX-temperature relation, which does not involve mass calibration.


Author(s):  
S. W. Duchesne ◽  
M. Johnston-Hollitt ◽  
A. R. Offringa ◽  
G. W. Pratt ◽  
Q. Zheng ◽  
...  

Abstract We detect and characterise extended, diffuse radio emission from galaxy clusters at 168 MHz within the Epoch of Reionization 0-h field: a $45^{\circ} \times 45^{\circ}$ region of the southern sky centred on R. A. ${}= 0^{\circ}$ , decl. ${}=-27^{\circ}$ . We detect 29 sources of interest; a newly detected halo in Abell 0141; a newly detected relic in Abell 2751; 4 new halo candidates and a further 4 new relic candidates; and a new phoenix candidate in Abell 2556. Additionally, we find nine clusters with unclassifiable, diffuse steep-spectrum emission as well as a candidate double relic system associated with RXC J2351.0-1934. We present measured source properties such as their integrated flux densities, spectral indices ( $\alpha$ , where $S_\nu \propto \nu^\alpha$ ), and sizes where possible. We find several of the diffuse sources to have ultra-steep spectra including the halo in Abell 0141, if confirmed, showing $\alpha \leq -2.1 \pm 0.1$ with the present data making it one of the steepest-spectrum haloes known. Finally, we compare our sample of haloes with previously detected haloes and revisit established scaling relations of the radio halo power ( $P_{1.4}$ ) with the cluster X-ray luminosity ( $L_{\textrm{X}}$ ) and mass ( $M_{500}$ ). We find that the newly detected haloes and candidate haloes are consistent with the $P_{1.4}$ – $L_{\textrm{X}}$ and $P_{1.4}$ – $M_{500}$ relations and see an increase in scatter in the previously found relations with increasing sample size likely caused by inhomogeneous determination of $P_{1.4}$ across the full halo sample. We show that the MWA is capable of detecting haloes and relics within most of the galaxy clusters within the Planck catalogue of Sunyaev–Zel’dovich sources depending on exact halo or relic properties.


2009 ◽  
Vol 498 (2) ◽  
pp. 361-378 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. W. Pratt ◽  
J. H. Croston ◽  
M. Arnaud ◽  
H. Böhringer

2011 ◽  
Vol 526 ◽  
pp. A105 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y.-Y. Zhang ◽  
H. Andernach ◽  
C. A. Caretta ◽  
T. H. Reiprich ◽  
H. Böhringer ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 527 ◽  
pp. C3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y.-Y. Zhang ◽  
A. Finoguenov ◽  
H. Böhringer ◽  
J.-P. Kneib ◽  
G. P. Smith ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 28-33
Author(s):  
Iu. Babyk ◽  

The detailed X-ray analysis of the distant galaxy cluster JKCS 041 is presented. We use deep (~75 ks) archived data of X-ray Chandra Observatory to extract the main physical characteristic for one of the most distant galaxy cluster known to date. We investigate the imaging and spectral properties of JKCS 041. We explore its surface brightness, density, entropy, cooling time, and mass profiles. The temperature of JKCS 041 is equal to 7.4 ± 2.9 keV while the total virial mass is M200 = (4.6 ± 2.9) × 1014MSun. The gas fraction is ~10% while the dark matter is ~90% at R200. We use the obtained physical parameters of JKCS 041 to build numerous X-ray scaling relations. By adding JKCS 041 parameters we increase the redshift of our previous cluster’s sample from 1.4 to 1.8. We study the three classical relations between temperature, luminosity and total mass, and two additional. We find the concentration parameter of JKCS 041, build c − M relation and compare them with current hydrodynamic simulations. In addition, we explore, for the first time in the case of distant objects, the M − Y = T · Mg relation which is one of the most robust mass estimators. We conclude that concentration parameter, c, of JKCS 041 is in a good agreement with theoretical predictions. The obtained X-ray scaling relations were used to probe their evolution. We find that our results show inconsistent with self-similar evolution models.


1999 ◽  
Vol 118 (1) ◽  
pp. 76-85 ◽  
Author(s):  
Piero Rosati ◽  
S. A. Stanford ◽  
Peter R. Eisenhardt ◽  
Richard Elston ◽  
Hyron Spinrad ◽  
...  
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