Do X-ray dark or underluminous galaxy clusters exist?
S. Andreon, A. Moretti (INAF-OABrera)

TL;DR
This study investigates the prevalence of X-ray dark or underluminous galaxy clusters, finding that such clusters are rare and that optical and X-ray selected surveys largely sample the same cluster population, supporting their combined use in cosmology.
Contribution
It provides the first unbiased estimate of the fraction of X-ray dark clusters in a color-selected sample and demonstrates the consistency between optical and X-ray cluster surveys for cosmological applications.
Findings
At least 89% of color-selected clusters are confirmed as real with potential wells.
X-ray dark clusters constitute at most about 11% of the sample.
Optical and X-ray surveys sample the same cluster population, validating their combined use.
Abstract
[Abridged] We study the X-ray properties of a color-selected sample of clusters at 0.1<z<0.3, to quantify the real aboundance of the population of X-ray dark or underluminous clusters and at the same time the spurious detection contamination level of color-selected cluster catalogs. A careful selection allowed us to have an X-ray-unbiased sample of 33 clusters to measure the Lx-richness relation. Swift 1.4 Ms X-ray observations show that at least 89% of the color-detected clusters are real objects with a potential well deep enough to heat and retain an intracluster medium. The percentage rises to 94 % when one includes the single spectroscopically confirmed color-selected cluster whose X-ray emission is not secured. Looking at our results from the opposite perspective, the percentage of X-ray dark clusters among color-selected clusters is very low: at most about 11 per cent (at 90 %…
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