The Properties of Fossil Groups of Galaxies
Paul Eigenthaler, Werner W. Zeilinger

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent research on fossil galaxy groups, highlighting their properties, abundance, and potential role as progenitors of brightest cluster galaxies, supported by new observational data and candidate identifications.
Contribution
It summarizes recent observational findings on fossil groups and reports new candidate detections from SDSS and RASS surveys, along with detailed spectroscopic studies.
Findings
34 new fossil group candidates identified
Spectroscopic analysis of central ellipticals conducted
Insights into stellar populations and luminosity functions obtained
Abstract
Numerical simulations as well as optical and X-ray observations over the last few years have shown that poor groups of galaxies can evolve to what is called a fossil group. Dynamical friction as the driving process leads to the coalescence of individual galaxies in ordinary poor groups leaving behind nothing more than a central, massive elliptical galaxy supposed to contain the merger history of the whole group. Due to merging timescales for less-massive galaxies and gas cooling timescales of the X-ray intragroup medium exceeding a Hubble time, a surrounding faint-galaxy population having survived this galactic cannibalism as well as an extended X-ray halo similar to that found in ordinary groups, is expected. Recent studies suggest that fossil groups are very abundant and could be the progenitors of brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) in the centers of rich galaxy clusters. However, only…
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