Finding Fossil Groups: Optical Identification and X-ray Confirmation
Eric D. Miller, Eli Rykoff, Renato Dupke, Claudia Mendes de Oliveira,, Raimundo Lopes de Oliveira, Robert Proctor, Gordon Garmire, Benjamin Koester,, Timothy McKay

TL;DR
This study reports the discovery of 12 new fossil galaxy groups identified through optical methods and confirmed with X-ray observations, providing insights into their properties and implications for cosmological measurements.
Contribution
The paper introduces a highly successful optical selection method for fossil groups and presents the first large sample with X-ray confirmation and detailed properties.
Findings
12 new fossil groups discovered and confirmed with X-ray data
X-ray properties of these groups are consistent with normal systems
Some fossil groups show irregular morphology, indicating past mergers or interactions
Abstract
We report the discovery of 12 new fossil groups of galaxies, systems dominated by a single giant elliptical galaxy and cluster-scale gravitational potential, but lacking the population of bright galaxies typically seen in galaxy clusters. These fossil groups (FGs), selected from the maxBCG optical cluster catalog, were detected in snapshot observations with the Chandra X-ray Observatory. We detail the highly successful selection method, with an 80% success rate in identifying 12 FGs from our target sample of 15 candidates. For 11 of the systems, we determine the X-ray luminosity, temperature, and hydrostatic mass, which do not deviate significantly from expectations for normal systems, spanning a range typical of rich groups and poor clusters of galaxies. A small number of detected FGs are morphologically irregular, possibly due to past mergers, interaction of the intra-group medium…
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