posted on 2023-06-07, 23:07authored byS A Stanford, Kathy RomerKathy Romer, Kivanc Sabirli, Michael Davidson, Matt Hilton, Pedro T P Viana, Chris A Collins, Scott T Kay, Andrew R Liddle, Robert G Mann, Christopher J Miller, Robert C Nichol, Michael J West, Christopher J Conselice, Hyron Spinrad, Daniel Stern, Kevin Bundy
We report the discovery of XMMXCS J2215.9-1738, a massive galaxy cluster at z=1.45, which was found in the XMM Cluster Survey. The cluster candidate was initially identified as an extended X-ray source in archival XMM data. Optical spectroscopy shows that six galaxies within a ~60" diameter region lie at z=1.45+/-0.01. Model fits to the X-ray spectra of the extended emission yield kT=7.4+2.7-1.8 keV (90% confidence); if there is an undetected central X-ray point source, then kT=6.5+2.6-1.8 keV. The bolometric X-ray luminosity is LX=4.4+0.8-0.6C 1044 ergs s-1 over a 2 Mpc radial region. The measured TX, which is the highest for any known cluster at z>1, suggests that this cluster is relatively massive for such a high redshift. The redshift of XMMXCS J2215.9-1738 is the highest currently known for a spectroscopically confirmed cluster of galaxies.
This paper presents the most distant X-ray cluster ever detected. As PI of the XCS, I have overall responsible for the pipeline X-ray processing that led to the discovery. I was also closely involved with the X-ray spectral analysis described in the paper.