Star formation and UV colors of the brightest Cluster Galaxies in the representative XMM-Newton Cluster Structure Survey
Megan Donahue, Seth Bruch, Emily Wang, G. Mark Voit, Amalia K. Hicks,, Deborah B. Haarsma, Judith H. Croston, Gabriel W. Pratt, Daniele Pierini,, Robert W. O'Connell, Hans Boehringer

TL;DR
This study investigates star formation and UV colors in Brightest Cluster Galaxies within galaxy clusters, revealing correlations between emission lines, UV excess, and cluster properties, with implications for understanding galaxy evolution in dense environments.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the connection between star formation, UV emission, and intracluster medium properties in BCGs using multi-wavelength data from the REXCESS survey.
Findings
Emission-line BCGs are predominantly in cool core clusters.
Star formation rates range from 0.1 to 8 solar masses per year.
UV-optical colors are consistent with old stellar populations in non-emission BCGs.
Abstract
We present UV broadband photometry and optical emission-line measurements for a sample of 32 Brightest Cluster Galaxies (BCGs) in clusters of the Representative XMM-Newton Cluster Structure Survey (REXCESS) with z = 0.06-0.18. The REXCESS clusters, chosen to study scaling relations in clusters of galaxies, have X-ray measurements of high quality. The trends of star formation and BCG colors with BCG and host properties can be investigated with this sample. The UV photometry comes from the XMM Optical Monitor, supplemented by existing archival GALEX photometry. We detected H\alpha and forbidden line emission in 7 (22%) of these BCGs, in optical spectra. All of the emission-line BCGs occupy clusters classified as cool cores, for an emission-line incidence rate of 70% for BCGs in cool core clusters. Significant correlations between the H\alpha equivalent widths, excess UV production in the…
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