The Swift BAT Perspective on Non-thermal Emission in HIFLUGCS Galaxy Clusters
Daniel R. Wik, Craig L. Sarazin, Yu-Ying Zhang, Wayne H. Baumgartner,, Richard F. Mushotzky, Jack Tueller, Takashi Okajima, and Tracy E. Clarke

TL;DR
This study uses Swift BAT and XMM-Newton data to search for non-thermal inverse Compton emission in galaxy clusters, finding no definitive detection but setting limits on relativistic electron pressure, especially in clusters with diffuse radio features.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis combining BAT and XMM-Newton data to constrain non-thermal emission in galaxy clusters, highlighting the challenges in detecting such signals.
Findings
No clear non-thermal emission detection in individual clusters.
Limits on relativistic electron pressure are around 10% of thermal pressure.
Initial signals in radio-halo clusters are degraded by modeling uncertainties.
Abstract
The search for diffuse non-thermal, inverse Compton (IC) emission from galaxy clusters at hard X-ray energies has been underway for many years, with most detections being either of low significance or controversial. In this work, we investigate 14-195 keV spectra from the Swift Burst Alert Telescope (BAT) all-sky survey for evidence of non-thermal excess emission above the exponentially decreasing tail of thermal emission in the flux-limited HIFLUGCS sample. To account for the thermal contribution at BAT energies, XMM-Newton EPIC spectra are extracted from coincident spatial regions so that both thermal and non-thermal spectral components can be determined simultaneously. We find marginally significant IC components in six clusters, though after closer inspection and consideration of systematic errors we are unable to claim a clear detection in any of them. The spectra of all clusters…
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