Detection of pure warm-hot intergalactic medium emission from a $7.2$ Mpc long filament in the Shapley supercluster using X-ray spectroscopy
Konstantinos Migkas, Florian Pacaud, Toni Tuominen, Nabila Aghanim

TL;DR
This study reports the first direct X-ray imaging and spectroscopic detection of pure warm-hot intergalactic medium emission from a 7.2 Mpc filament in the Shapley supercluster, confirming cosmological simulation predictions.
Contribution
It provides the first spectroscopic detection of WHIM emission from a single, pristine filament without contamination, characterizing its physical properties.
Findings
Detected extended thermal WHIM emission with 6.1σ significance
Constrained filament temperature to 0.8-1.1 keV
Measured baryon overdensity to 30-40
Abstract
A significant fraction of the local Universe's baryonic content remains undetected. Cosmological simulations indicate that most of the missing baryons reside in cosmic filaments in the form of warm-hot intergalactic medium (WHIM). The latter shows low surface brightness and soft X-ray emission, making it challenging to detect. Until now, X-ray WHIM emission has been detected only in very few individual filaments, whereas in even fewer filaments, WHIM has been spectroscopically analyzed. In this work, we used four Suzaku pointings to study the WHIM emission of a filament in the Shapley supercluster, connecting the galaxy cluster pairs A3530/32 and A3528-N/S. We additionally employ XMM-Newton observations to robustly account for point sources in the filament and to fully characterize the neighboring clusters and their signal contamination to the filament region. We report the direct…
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