Observational constraints on the redshift evolution of X-ray scaling relations of galaxy clusters out to z ~ 1.5
A. Reichert, H. B\"ohringer, R. Fassbender, M. M\"uhlegger

TL;DR
This study consolidates observational data to analyze how X-ray scaling relations of galaxy clusters evolve up to redshift 1.5, confirming some theoretical predictions and refining calibration for future cosmological surveys.
Contribution
It provides an updated, consistent framework for the evolution of X-ray scaling relations, incorporating new data and addressing previous inconsistencies.
Findings
M-T relation evolution aligns with self-similar prediction
X-ray luminosity evolution is slower than expected
Selection biases influence data set discrepancies
Abstract
A precise understanding of the relations between observable X-ray properties of galaxy clusters and cluster mass is a vital part of the application of X-ray galaxy cluster surveys to test cosmological models. An understanding of how these relations evolve with redshift is just emerging from a number of observational data sets. The current literature provides a diverse and inhomogeneous picture of scaling relation evolution. We attempt to transform these results and the data on recently discovered distant clusters into an updated and consistent framework, and provide an overall view of scaling relation evolution. We study in particular the M-T, L_X-T, and M-L_X relation combining 14 published data sets supplemented with recently published data of distant clusters and new results from follow-up observations of the XMM-Newton Distant Cluster Project (XDCP). We find that the evolution…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
