Back to Search Start Over

A pan-chromatic view of the galaxy cluster XMMU J1230.3+1339 at z=0.975 - Observing the assembly of a massive system

Authors :
Fassbender, Rene
Böhringer, Hans
Santos, Joana S.
Pratt, Gabriel W.
Suhada, Robert
Kohnert, Jan
Lerchster, Mike
Rovilos, Manolis
Pierini, Daniele
Chon, Gayoung
Schwope, Axel D.
Lamer, Georg
Mühlegger, Martin
Rosati, Piero
Quintana, Hernan
Nastasi, Alessandro
de Hoon, Arjen
Seitz, Stella
Mohr, Joseph J.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

We present a comprehensive galaxy cluster study of XMMU J1230.3+1339 based on a joint analysis of X-ray data, optical imaging and spectroscopy observations, weak lensing results, and radio properties for achieving a detailed multi-component view of this newly discovered system at z=0.975. We find an optically very rich and massive system with M200$\simeq$(4.2$\pm$0.8)$\times$10^14 M$\sun$, Tx$\simeq$5.3(+0.7--0.6)keV, and Lx$\simeq$(6.5$\pm$0.7)$\times$10^44 erg/s, for which various widely used mass proxies are measured and compared. We have identified multiple cluster-related components including a central fly-through group close to core passage with associated marginally extended 1.4GHz radio emission possibly originating from the turbulent wake region of the merging event. On the cluster outskirts we see evidence for an on-axis infalling group with a second Brightest Cluster Galaxy (BCG) and indications for an additional off-axis group accretion event. We trace two galaxy filaments beyond the nominal cluster radius and provide a tentative reconstruction of the 3D-accretion geometry of the system. In terms of total mass, ICM structure, optical richness, and the presence of two dominant BCG-type galaxies, the newly confirmed cluster XMMU J1230.3+1339 is likely the progenitor of a system very similar to the local Coma cluster, differing by 7.6 Gyr of structure evolution.<br />Comment: 26 pages, 14 color figures, accepted for publication in A&A

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1009.0264
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1051/0004-6361/201015204