Exploring the galaxy cluster-group transition regime at high redshifts: Physical properties of two newly detected z > 1 systems
R. \v{S}uhada, R. Fassbender, A. Nastasi, H. B\"ohringer, A. de Hoon,, D. Pierini, J. S. Santos, P. Rosati, M. M\"uhlegger, H. Quintana, A. D., Schwope, G. Lamer, J. Kohnert, G. W. Pratt

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery and analysis of two high-redshift galaxy clusters at z>1, using multi-wavelength data to determine their physical properties and explore the galaxy cluster-group transition regime.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed physical characterization of two z>1 galaxy clusters, including spectroscopic redshifts and mass estimates, expanding knowledge of high-redshift cluster properties.
Findings
Confirmed one cluster at z=1.185 with a mass of ~1.6x10^{14} Msun.
Detected a second cluster at z=1.358 with an active galactic nucleus.
Identified challenges in detecting low-mass, high-redshift clusters.
Abstract
Context: Multi-wavelength surveys for clusters of galaxies are opening a window on the elusive high-redshift (z>1) cluster population. Well controlled statistical samples of distant clusters will enable us to answer questions about their cosmological context, early assembly phases and the thermodynamical evolution of the intracluster medium. Aims: We report on the detection of two z>1 systems, XMMU J0302.2-0001 and XMMU J1532.2-0836, as part of the XMM-Newton Distant Cluster Project (XDCP) sample. We investigate the nature of the sources, measure their spectroscopic redshift and determine their basic physical parameters. Methods: The results of the present paper are based on the analysis of XMM-Newton archival data, optical/near-infrared imaging and deep optical follow-up spectroscopy of the clusters. Results: We confirm the X-ray source XMMU J0302.2-0001 as a gravitationally bound,…
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