X-ray Properties of SPT Selected Galaxy Clusters at 0.2<z<1.5 Observed with XMM-Newton
Esra Bulbul, I-Non Chiu, Joseph J. Mohr, Michael McDonald, Bradford, Benson, Mark W. Bautz, Matthew Bayliss, Lindsey Bleem, Mark Brodwin,, Sebastian Bocquet, Raffaella Capasso, Joerg P. Dietrich, Bill Forman, Julie, Hlavacek-Larrondo, William L. Holzapfel, Gourav Khullar

TL;DR
This study analyzes X-ray properties of galaxy clusters selected via the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect, establishing scaling relations across a broad redshift range and highlighting the impact of systematic uncertainties on these relations.
Contribution
It provides the first constraints on X-ray scaling relations for SZE-selected clusters up to redshift 1.5, using SZE-based masses to avoid X-ray selection biases.
Findings
Mass trends are steeper than self-similar predictions.
Redshift trends are consistent with self-similarity within uncertainties.
Systematic uncertainties in SZE-based masses limit amplitude constraints.
Abstract
We present measurements of the X-ray observables of the intra-cluster medium (ICM), including luminosity , ICM mass , emission-weighted mean temperature , and integrated pressure , that are derived from XMM-Newton X-ray observations of a Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect (SZE) selected sample of 59 galaxy clusters from the South Pole Telescope SPT-SZ survey that span the redshift range of . We constrain the best-fit power law scaling relations between X-ray observables, redshift, and halo mass. The halo masses are estimated based on previously published SZE observable to mass scaling relations, calibrated using information that includes the halo mass function. Employing SZE-based masses in this sample enables us to constrain these scaling relations for massive galaxy clusters ( ) to the highest redshifts where these…
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