TY - JOUR
T1 - The Chandra Deep Field North survey. IX. Extended X-ray sources
AU - Bauer, F. E.
AU - Alexander, D. M.
AU - Brandt, W. N.
AU - Hornschemeier, A. E.
AU - Miyaji, T.
AU - Garmire, G. P.
AU - Schneider, D. P.
AU - Bautz, M. W.
AU - Chartas, G.
AU - Griffiths, R. E.
AU - Sargent, W. L.W.
PY - 2002/3
Y1 - 2002/3
N2 - The ≈1 Ms Chandra Deep Field North observation is used to study the extended X-ray sources in the region surrounding the Hubble Deep Field North (HDF-N), yielding the most sensitive probe of extended X-ray emission at cosmological distances to date. A total of six such sources are detected, the majority of which align with small numbers of optically bright galaxies. Their angular sizes, band ratios, and X-ray luminosities-assuming they lie at the same distances as the galaxies coincident with the X-ray emission - are generally consistent with the properties found for nearby groups of galaxies. One source is notably different and is likely to be a poor-to-moderate X-ray cluster at high redshift (i.e., z ≳ 0.7). This source has a large angular extent, a double-peaked X-ray morphology, and an overdensity of unusual objects [very red objects, optically faint (I ≥ 24) radio and X-ray sources]. Another of the six sources is coincident with several z ≈ 1.01 galaxies located within the HDF-N itself, including the FR I radio galaxy VLA J123644+621133, and is likely to be a group or poor cluster of galaxies at that redshift. We are also able to place strong constraints on the optically detected cluster of galaxies ClG 1236+6215 at z = 0.85 and the wide-angle-tailed radio galaxy VLA J123725+621128 at z ∼ 1-2; both sources are expected to have considerable associated diffuse X-ray emission, and yet they have rest-frame 0.5-2.0 keV X-ray luminosities of ≲3 × 10 42and ≲(3-15) × 1042 ergs s-1, respectively. The environments of both sources are either likely to have a significant deficit of hot intracluster gas compared with local clusters of galaxies, or they are X-ray groups. We find the surface density of extended X-ray sources in this observation to be 167-67+97 deg -2 at a limiting soft-band flux of ≈3 × 10-16 ergs cm-2 s-1. No evolution in the X-ray luminosity function of clusters is needed to explain this value.
AB - The ≈1 Ms Chandra Deep Field North observation is used to study the extended X-ray sources in the region surrounding the Hubble Deep Field North (HDF-N), yielding the most sensitive probe of extended X-ray emission at cosmological distances to date. A total of six such sources are detected, the majority of which align with small numbers of optically bright galaxies. Their angular sizes, band ratios, and X-ray luminosities-assuming they lie at the same distances as the galaxies coincident with the X-ray emission - are generally consistent with the properties found for nearby groups of galaxies. One source is notably different and is likely to be a poor-to-moderate X-ray cluster at high redshift (i.e., z ≳ 0.7). This source has a large angular extent, a double-peaked X-ray morphology, and an overdensity of unusual objects [very red objects, optically faint (I ≥ 24) radio and X-ray sources]. Another of the six sources is coincident with several z ≈ 1.01 galaxies located within the HDF-N itself, including the FR I radio galaxy VLA J123644+621133, and is likely to be a group or poor cluster of galaxies at that redshift. We are also able to place strong constraints on the optically detected cluster of galaxies ClG 1236+6215 at z = 0.85 and the wide-angle-tailed radio galaxy VLA J123725+621128 at z ∼ 1-2; both sources are expected to have considerable associated diffuse X-ray emission, and yet they have rest-frame 0.5-2.0 keV X-ray luminosities of ≲3 × 10 42and ≲(3-15) × 1042 ergs s-1, respectively. The environments of both sources are either likely to have a significant deficit of hot intracluster gas compared with local clusters of galaxies, or they are X-ray groups. We find the surface density of extended X-ray sources in this observation to be 167-67+97 deg -2 at a limiting soft-band flux of ≈3 × 10-16 ergs cm-2 s-1. No evolution in the X-ray luminosity function of clusters is needed to explain this value.
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U2 - 10.1086/338903
DO - 10.1086/338903
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0000870043
SN - 0004-6256
VL - 123
SP - 1163
EP - 1178
JO - Astronomical Journal
JF - Astronomical Journal
IS - 3 1755
ER -