CODEX clusters. The Survey, the Catalog, and Cosmology of the X-ray Luminosity Function
A. Finoguenov, E. Rykoff, N. Clerc, M. Costanzi, S. Hagstotz, J. Ider, Chitham, K. Kiiveri, C. C. Kirkpatrick, R. Capasso, J. Comparat, S. Damsted,, R. Dupke, G. Erfanianfar, J. Patrick Henry, F. Kaefer, J-P. Kneib, V., Lindholm, E. Rozo, L. van Waerbeke, J. Weller

TL;DR
This paper introduces the CODEX galaxy cluster survey, combining X-ray and optical data to extend the study of galaxy clusters to higher redshifts and lower masses, and models their luminosity function for cosmological insights.
Contribution
It presents a new X-ray galaxy cluster catalog with optical richness, models the selection function, and provides constraints on the X-ray luminosity function evolution up to redshift 0.6.
Findings
No clear separation between galaxy clusters and AGN in richness distribution.
XLF shows little redshift evolution up to z=0.6.
Catalog extends to z=0.6 with flux limit of 10^{-13} erg/s/cm^2.
Abstract
Large area catalogs of galaxy clusters constructed from ROSAT All Sky Survey provide the base for our knowledge on the population of clusters thanks to the long-term multiwavelength efforts on their follow-up. Advent of large area photometric surveys superseding in depth previous all-sky data allows us to revisit the construction of X-ray cluster catalogs, extending the study to lower cluster masses and to higher redshifts and to provide the modelling of the selection function. We perform a wavelet detection of X-ray sources and make extensive simulations of the detection of clusters in the RASS data. We assign an optical richness to each of the 24,788 detected X-ray sources in the 10,382 square degrees of SDSS BOSS area, using redMaPPer version 5.2. We name this survey COnstrain Dark Energy with X-ray (CODEX) clusters. We show that there is no obvious separation of sources on galaxy…
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.
