Document detail
ID

oai:arXiv.org:2411.16546

Topic
Astrophysics - Astrophysics of Gal... Astrophysics - High Energy Astroph...
Author
Popesso, P. Marini, I. Dolag, K. Lamer, G. Csizi, B. Vladutescu-Zopp, S. Biffi, V. Robothan, A. Bravo, M. Tempel, E. Yang, X. Li, Q. Biviano, A. Lovisari, L. Ettori, S. Angelinelli, M. Driver, S. Toptun, V. Dev, A. Mazengo, D. Merloni, A. Mroczkowski, T. Comparat, J. Zhang, Y. Ponti, G. Bulbul, E.
Category

sciences: astrophysics

Year

2024

listing date

12/4/2024

Keywords
mass magneticum galaxy halo relations surface brightness astrophysics x-ray observational data predictions techniques
Metrics

Abstract

Hydrodynamical simulation predictions are often compared with observational data without fully accounting for systematics and biases specific to observational techniques.

Using the magnetohydrodynamical simulation Magneticum, we generate mock eROSITA eRASS:4 data, combined with GAMA-like spectroscopic surveys and optically selected galaxy catalogs from the same light-cone, to analyze hot gas properties in galaxy groups via a stacking technique.

This study aims to (i) incorporate observational systematics into predictions and (ii) evaluate the reliability of stacking techniques for determining average X-ray properties of galaxy groups.

Our analysis provides X-ray emission predictions from Magneticum, including contributions from AGN, X-ray binaries (XRBs), and the Intra-Group Medium (IGM) as a function of halo mass, covering Milky Way (MW)-like groups to poor clusters.

We find that AGN and XRBs dominate the X-ray surface brightness profiles of low-mass halos.

The reliability of stacking techniques is tested by reproducing input X-ray surface brightness and electron density profiles, accounting for completeness and contamination of prior samples, miscentering of optical group centers, uncertainties in X-ray emissivity due to gas temperature and metallicity assumption, and systematics in halo mass proxies.

The halo mass proxy emerges as the primary source of systematics, affecting X-ray surface brightness and scaling relations.

We show that stacked X-ray luminosity-mass relations are flatter than input relations but consistent with observations.

Additionally, the retrieved hot gas fraction-mass relation aligns well with observational data.

These results highlight the need to account for systematic errors when comparing stacking techniques to other methods using different prior catalogs or predictions.

;Comment: Submitted to A&A.

18 pages and 19 figures, Abstract reduced for ArXiv submission

Popesso, P.,Marini, I.,Dolag, K.,Lamer, G.,Csizi, B.,Vladutescu-Zopp, S.,Biffi, V.,Robothan, A.,Bravo, M.,Tempel, E.,Yang, X.,Li, Q.,Biviano, A.,Lovisari, L.,Ettori, S.,Angelinelli, M.,Driver, S.,Toptun, V.,Dev, A.,Mazengo, D.,Merloni, A.,Mroczkowski, T.,Comparat, J.,Zhang, Y.,Ponti, G.,Bulbul, E., 2024, The perils of stacking optically selected groups in eROSITA data. The Magneticum perspective

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