The XMM Cluster Survey: Evidence for energy injection at high redshift from evolution of the X-ray luminosity-temperature relation
Matt Hilton, A. Kathy Romer, Scott T. Kay, Nicola Mehrtens, E. J., Lloyd-Davies, Peter A. Thomas, Chris J. Short, Julian A. Mayers, Philip J., Rooney, John P. Stott, Chris A. Collins, Craig D. Harrison, Ben Hoyle, Andrew, R. Liddle, Robert G. Mann, Christopher J. Miller

TL;DR
This study analyzes the evolution of the X-ray luminosity-temperature relation in galaxy clusters since redshift 1.5, finding evidence for high-redshift energy injection and challenging current feedback models.
Contribution
It provides the first homogeneous measurement of the L_X-T relation evolution over this redshift range using a large cluster sample.
Findings
No evolution in slope or scatter since z~1.5
Negative evolution in normalization consistent with high-redshift energy injection
Current models with AGN feedback predict positive evolution, conflicting with observations
Abstract
We measure the evolution of the X-ray luminosity-temperature (L_X-T) relation since z~1.5 using a sample of 211 serendipitously detected galaxy clusters with spectroscopic redshifts drawn from the XMM Cluster Survey first data release (XCS-DR1). This is the first study spanning this redshift range using a single, large, homogeneous cluster sample. Using an orthogonal regression technique, we find no evidence for evolution in the slope or intrinsic scatter of the relation since z~1.5, finding both to be consistent with previous measurements at z~0.1. However, the normalisation is seen to evolve negatively with respect to the self-similar expectation: we find E(z)^{-1} L_X = 10^{44.67 +/- 0.09} (T/5)^{3.04 +/- 0.16} (1+z)^{-1.5 +/- 0.5}, which is within 2 sigma of the zero evolution case. We see milder, but still negative, evolution with respect to self-similar when using a bisector…
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