Galaxy cluster virial-shock sources in eROSITA catalogs
Abstract
Following the recent identification of discrete ROSAT and radio sources associated with the virial shocks of MCXC clusters and groups, we examine if the early eROSITA-DE data release (EDR) shows virial-shock X-ray sources within its 140 deg2 field. EDR catalog sources are stacked and radially binned around EDR catalog clusters and groups. The properties of the excess virial-shock sources are inferred statistically by comparing the virial-shock region to the field. An excess of X-ray sources is found narrowly localized at the 2.0<r/R500<2.25 normalized radii, just inside the anticipated virial shocks, of the resolved 532 clusters, for samples of both extended (3σ for 534 sources) or bright (3.5σ for 5820 sources; 4σ excluding the low cluster-mass quartile) sources. The excess sources are on average extended ( 100 kpc), luminous (LX 1043-44 erg s-1), and hot (), consistent with infalling gaseous halos crossing the virial shock. The results agree with the stacked ROSAT-MCXC signal, showing the higher LX anticipated at EDR redshifts and a possible dependence upon host mass. Localized virial-shock spikes in the distributions of discrete radio, X-ray, and probably also γ-ray sources are new powerful probes of accretion from the cosmic web, with strong constraints anticipated with future all-sky catalogs such as by eROSITA.
Turn this paper into a lesson
ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.