The K-band Hubble diagram for brightest cluster galaxies in X-ray clusters
Abstract
This paper concerns the K band Hubble diagram for the brightest cluster galaxies (BCGs) in a sample of X-ray clusters covering the redshift range 0.05<z<0.8. We show that BCGs in clusters of high X-ray luminosity are excellent standard candles: the intrinsic dispersion in the raw K band absolute magnitudes of BCGs in clusters with L X > 2.3 × 1044 erg s-1 (in the 0.3 - 3.5 keV band) is no more than 0.22 mag, and is not significantly reduced by correcting for the BCG structure parameter, α, or for X-ray luminosity. This is the smallest scatter in the absolute magnitudes of any single class of galaxy and demonstrates the homogeneity of BCGs in high-L X clusters. By contrast, we find that the brightest members of low-L X systems display a wider dispersion ( 0.5 mag) in absolute magnitude than commonly seen in previous studies, which arises from the inclusion, in X-ray flux-limited samples, of poor clusters and groups which are usually omitted from low redshift studies of BCGs in optically rich clusters....[abstract shortened].. The BCGs in our high-L X clusters yield a value of M=0.280.24 if the cosmological constant =0. For a flat Universe we find M=0.55+0.14-0.15 with a 95 per cent confidence upper limit to the cosmological constant corresponding to <0.73. These results are discussed in the context of other methods used to constrain the density of the Universe, such as Type Ia supernovae.
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