Bibcode
DOI
Castander, Francisco J.; Bower, Richard G.; Ellis, Richard S.; Aragón-Salamanca, Alfonso; Mason, Keith O.; Hasinger, Günther; McMahon, Richard G.; Carrera, Francisco J.; Mittaz, Jon P. D.; Pérez-Fournon, I.; Lehto, Harry J.
Bibliographical reference
Nature, Volume 377, Issue 6544, pp. 39-41 (1995).
Advertised on:
9
1995
Journal
Citations
65
Refereed citations
56
Description
CLUSTERS of galaxies are the largest gravitationally bound systems in
the Universe and therefore provide important constraints on the
formation and evolution of large-scale structure. Cluster evolution can
be inferred from observations of the X-ray emission of the gas in
distant clusters, but interpreting these data is not straightforward. In
a simplified view, clusters grow from perturbations in the matter
distribution, and the intracluster gas is compressed and shock-heated by
the gravitational collapse1. If the gas is in hydrostatic
equilibrium the resulting X-ray emission is related in a simple way to
the evolving gravitational potential. But if processes such as radiative
cooling or pre-collapse heating of the gas are also important, the X-ray
evolution will be strongly influenced by the thermal history of the gas.
Here we present the results of a faint flux-limited sample of X-ray
selected clusters observed by Rosat. Very few distant clusters have been
identified, and their redshift distribution seems to be inconsistent
with simple models based on the evolution of the gravitational
potential. Our results thus suggest that radiative cooling or
non-gravitational heating of intracluster gas must be important in the
evolution of clusters.