Discovery of an X-ray-Luminous Galaxy Cluster at z=1.4
Abstract
We report the discovery of a massive, X-ray-luminous cluster of galaxies at z=1.393, the most distant X-ray-selected cluster found to date. XMMU J2235.3-2557 was serendipitously detected as an extended X-ray source in an archival XMM-Newton observation of NGC 7314. VLT-FORS2 R and z band snapshot imaging reveals an over-density of red galaxies in both angular and color spaces. The galaxy enhancement is coincident in the sky with the X-ray emission; the cluster red sequence at R-z ~ 2.1 identifies it as a high-redshift candidate. Subsequent VLT-FORS2 multi-object spectroscopy unambiguously confirms the presence of a massive cluster based on 12 concordant redshifts in the interval 1.38<z<1.40. The preliminary cluster velocity dispersion is 762+/-265 km/s. VLT-ISAAC Ks and J band images underscore the rich distribution of red galaxies associated with the cluster. Based on a 45 ks XMM-Newton observation, we find the cluster has an aperture-corrected, unabsorbed X-ray flux of fX = (3.6 +/- 0.3) x 10-14 erg/cm2/s, a rest-frame X-ray luminosity of LX = (3.0 +/- 0.2) x 1044 h70-2 erg/s (0.5--2.0 keV), and a temperature of kT=6.0 (+2.5, -1.8) keV. Though XMMU J2235.3-2557 is likely the first confirmed z>1 cluster found with XMM-Newton, the relative ease and efficiency of discovery demonstrates that it should be possible to build large samples of z>1 clusters through the joint use of X-ray and large, ground-based telescopes.
Turn this paper into a full lesson
ArcXiv compiles a staged curriculum from this paper: 8-12 lessons across beginner → advanced, synthesised section guides, visuals, flashcards, a quiz, exercises, and on-demand deep dives per section. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.