LoCuSS: The infall of X-ray groups onto massive clusters
C. P. Haines, A. Finoguenov, G. P. Smith, A. Babul, E. Egami, P., Mazzotta, N. Okabe, M. J. Pereira, M. Bianconi, S. L. McGee, F. Ziparo, L. E., Campusano, C. Loyola

TL;DR
This study uses XMM-Newton observations to identify and analyze infalling X-ray groups around massive galaxy clusters at z~0.2, revealing their significant contribution to cluster mass growth and the biased nature of their mass function.
Contribution
First comprehensive X-ray survey of infalling groups around clusters at z~0.2, quantifying their role in cluster mass assembly and comparing their properties to field groups.
Findings
Infalling groups are 25 times more numerous near clusters than in the field.
Groups contribute approximately 19% of the cluster mass.
Clusters grow by about 16% due to group accretion since z~0.2.
Abstract
Galaxy clusters are expected to form hierarchically in a LCDM universe, growing primarily through mergers with lower mass clusters and the continual accretion of group-mass halos. Galaxy clusters assemble late, doubling their masses since z~0.5, and so the outer regions of clusters should be replete with infalling group-mass systems. We present an XMM-Newton survey to search for X-ray groups in the infall regions of 23 massive galaxy clusters at z~0.2, identifying 39 X-ray groups that have been spectroscopically confirmed to lie at the cluster redshift. These groups have mass estimates in the range 2x10^13-7x10^14Msun, and group-to-cluster mass ratios as low as 0.02. The comoving number density of X-ray groups in the infall regions is ~25x higher than that seen for isolated X-ray groups from the XXL survey. The average mass per cluster contained within these X-ray groups is…
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