A New X-ray Selected Sample of Very Extended Galaxy Groups from the ROSAT All-Sky Survey
Weiwei Xu, Miriam E. Ramos-Ceja, Florian Pacaud, Thomas H. Reiprich,, Thomas Erben

TL;DR
This study uncovers a new class of very extended, low surface brightness galaxy groups in the ROSAT All-Sky Survey, suggesting previous surveys missed such groups which could impact cosmological constraints.
Contribution
It introduces a dedicated detection algorithm revealing previously missed, very extended galaxy groups in RASS data, expanding the known X-ray galaxy group population.
Findings
Discovered 13 new very extended galaxy groups in RASS data.
Some groups have fluxes above previous survey limits.
These groups have flatter surface brightness profiles.
Abstract
Some indications for tension have long been identified between cosmological constraints obtained from galaxy clusters and primary CMB measurements. Typically, assuming the matter density and fluctuations, as parameterized with Omega_m and sigma_8, estimated from CMB measurements, many more clusters are expected than those actually observed. One possible explanation could be that certain types of galaxy groups or clusters were missed in samples constructed in previous surveys, resulting in a higher incompleteness than estimated. We aim to determine if a hypothetical class of very extended, low surface brightness, galaxy groups or clusters have been missed in previous X-ray cluster surveys based on the ROSAT All-Sky Survey (RASS). We applied a dedicated source detection algorithm sensitive also to more unusual group or cluster surface brightness distributions. We found many known but also…
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