The XMM Cluster Survey: Optical analysis methodology and the first data release
Nicola Mehrtens, A. Kathy Romer, E. J. Lloyd-Davies, Matt Hilton,, Christopher J. Miller, S. A. Stanford, Mark Hosmer, Ben Hoyle, Chris A., Collins, Andrew R. Liddle, Pedro T. P. Viana, Robert C. Nichol, John P., Stott, E. Naomi Dubois, Scott T. Kay, Martin Sahlen, Owain Young

TL;DR
The paper presents the first data release of the XMM Cluster Survey, including 503 galaxy clusters with optical confirmation, redshift estimates, and X-ray temperature measurements, advancing cosmological research and cluster evolution studies.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive catalog of new and known galaxy clusters from XMM-Newton data, with detailed analysis methods and diverse subsamples for cosmological applications.
Findings
503 galaxy clusters cataloged, including 255 new to literature.
Redshift estimates for 464 clusters, with 261 spectroscopic.
X-ray temperatures measured for 402 clusters.
Abstract
The XMM Cluster Survey (XCS) is a serendipitous search for galaxy clusters using all publicly available data in the XMM-Newton Science Archive. Its main aims are to measure cosmological parameters and trace the evolution of X-ray scaling relations. In this paper we present the first data release from the XMM Cluster Survey (XCS-DR1). This consists of 503 optically confirmed, serendipitously detected, X-ray clusters. Of these clusters, 255 are new to the literature and 356 are new X-ray discoveries. We present 464 clusters with a redshift estimate (0.06 < z < 1.46), including 261 clusters with spectroscopic redshifts. In addition, we have measured X-ray temperatures (Tx) for 402 clusters (0.4 < Tx < 14.7 keV). We highlight seven interesting subsamples of XCS-DR1 clusters: (i) 10 clusters at high redshift (z > 1.0, including a new spectroscopically-confirmed cluster at z = 1.01); (ii) 67…
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