A Serendipitous Galaxy Cluster Survey with XMM: Expected Catalogue Properties and Scientific Applications
A. Kathy Romer (1), Pedro T.P.Viana (2), Andrew R. Liddle (3,4),, Robert G. Mann (3,5) ((1) CMU, (2) U.Porto, (3) Imperial College, (4) U., Sussex, (5) U. Edinburgh)

TL;DR
This paper models a large X-ray galaxy cluster survey with XMM, predicting its potential to detect thousands of clusters across different cosmological models, enabling diverse scientific studies.
Contribution
It provides detailed predictions of the survey's properties and scientific applications based on cosmological models, guiding future observational strategies.
Findings
Over 8000 clusters expected in low-density universe model
Survey can detect clusters up to redshift 1
Results depend strongly on cosmological parameters
Abstract
This paper describes a serendipitous galaxy cluster survey that we plan to conduct with the XMM X-ray satellite. We have modeled the expected properties of such a survey for three different cosmological models, using an extended Press-Schechter (Press & Schechter 1974) formalism, combined with a detailed characterization of the expected capabilities of the EPIC camera on board XMM. We estimate that, over the ten year design lifetime of XMM, the EPIC camera will image a total of ~800 square degrees in fields suitable for the serendipitous detection of clusters of galaxies. For the presently-favored low-density model with a cosmological constant, our simulations predict that this survey area would yield a catalogue of more than 8000 clusters, ranging from poor to very rich systems, with around 750 detections above z=1. A low-density open Universe yields similar numbers, though with a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAstronomy and Astrophysical Research · Stellar, planetary, and galactic studies · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
