Anisotropy of the galaxy cluster X-ray luminosity-temperature relation
Konstantinos Migkas, Thomas H. Reiprich

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel test for the Cosmological Principle using galaxy cluster X-ray data, revealing anisotropies in the luminosity-temperature relation that challenge isotropy assumptions.
Contribution
It presents a new method exploiting the Lx-T relation's properties to test cosmic isotropy, using two independent galaxy cluster samples and analyzing their anisotropic patterns.
Findings
Detected a significant anisotropy in the Lx-T relation in a specific sky region.
Found similar anisotropic patterns in two independent galaxy cluster samples.
Observed consistency of anisotropy signals with other cosmological probes.
Abstract
We introduce a new test to study the Cosmological Principle with galaxy clusters. Galaxy clusters exhibit a tight correlation between the luminosity and temperature of the X-ray-emitting intracluster medium. While the luminosity measurement depends on cosmological parameters through the luminosity distance, the temperature determination is cosmology-independent. We exploit this property to test the isotropy of the luminosity distance over the full extragalactic sky, through the normalization of the scaling relation and the cosmological parameters and . We use two almost independent galaxy cluster samples: the ASCA Cluster Catalog (ACC) and the XMM Cluster Survey (XCS-DR1). Interestingly enough, these two samples appear to have the same pattern for with respect to the Galactic longitude. We also identify one sky region within (Group A)…
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