Identification of low redshift groups and clusters of galaxies in the X-CLASS survey and the X-ray luminosity-temperature relation
Q. Moysan, F. Sarron, N. Clerc, G. Soucail, C. Adami, B. Altieri, R. Cabanac, M. Chira, J. Comparat, D. Coia, E. Drigga, E. Gaynullina, A. Khalikova, E. Koulouridis, K. Migkas, M. Molham, L. Paquereau, T. Sadibekova, I. Valtchanov

TL;DR
This study investigates the X-ray luminosity-temperature relation in low-redshift galaxy groups and clusters, revealing a steeper relation than self-similar models predict, likely due to feedback processes affecting gas retention.
Contribution
It provides a new, spectroscopically complete sample of low-redshift systems and refines the $L_X$-$T$ relation accounting for selection biases and measurement uncertainties.
Findings
The $L_X$-$T$ relation has a slope of 3.2, steeper than self-similar predictions.
The relation indicates a stronger decrease in luminosity with mass in groups than in clusters.
Feedback processes likely expel gas more efficiently in shallower potential wells.
Abstract
Properties of the hot intracluster and intragroup medium are mostly set by the underlying gravitational potential well, although complex astrophysical processes at play during their buildup may leave a significant imprint. Observational constraints on the degree and scales of such non-gravitational processes require well-selected samples of objects and deep observations of their gas content. We aim to study the scaling relation between two global properties of the hot gas, namely its soft-band X-ray luminosity () and its temperature (), by studying a sample of low-mass systems associated with precise redshifts, simultaneously accounting for sample selection biases and associated measurement uncertainties. This work takes as input a large catalogue of X-ray-selected galaxy clusters (X-CLASS). We perform a thorough revision of the redshifts of sources using deep photometric data…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Scientific Research and Discoveries
