Discovery of a galaxy cluster with a violently starbursting core at z=2.506
Tao Wang, David Elbaz, Emanuele Daddi, Alexis Finoguenov, Daizhong, Liu, Corentin Schreiber, Sergio Martin, Veronica Strazzullo, Francesco, Valentino, Remco van der Burg, Anita Zanella, Laure Ciesla, Raphael Gobat,, Amandine Le Brun, Maurilio Pannella, Mark Sargent, Xinwen Shu

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the most distant X-ray-detected galaxy cluster at z=2.506, characterized by a dense core of star-forming galaxies and providing new insights into early cluster formation and galaxy evolution.
Contribution
It presents the first detailed study of a high-redshift galaxy cluster with a starbursting core, revealing rapid core build-up and the transition phase between protoclusters and mature clusters.
Findings
Most distant X-ray-detected cluster at z=2.506
Core dominated by star-forming galaxies with high SFR
Evidence of rapid dense core formation and transition phase
Abstract
We report the discovery of a remarkable concentration of massive galaxies with extended X-ray emission at , which contains 11 massive () galaxies in the central 80kpc region (11.6 overdensity). We have spectroscopically confirmed 17 member galaxies with 11 from CO and the remaining ones from . The X-ray luminosity, stellar mass content and velocity dispersion all point to a collapsed, cluster-sized dark matter halo with mass , making it the most distant X-ray-detected cluster known to date. Unlike other clusters discovered so far, this structure is dominated by star-forming galaxies (SFGs) in the core with only 2 out of the 11 massive galaxies classified as quiescent. The star formation rate (SFR) in the 80kpc core reaches 3400 yr with a gas depletion time…
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.
