The Bright SHARC Survey: The Selection Function and its Impact on the Cluster X-ray Luminosity Function

Abstract
We present the results of a set of simulations designed to quantify the selection function of the Bright SHARC survey for distant clusters. The statistical significance of the simulations relied on the creation of thousands of artificial clusters with redshifts and luminosities in the range 0.25<z<0.95 and 0.5<L_X<10x10^44 erg/s (0.5-2.0 keV). We created 1 standard and 19 varied distribution functions, each of which assumed a different set of cluster, cosmological and operational parameters. The parameters we varied included the values of Omega_0, Omega_Lambda, Beta, core radius and ellipticity. We also investigated how non-standard surface brightness profiles; cooling flows; and the ROSAT pointing target, influence the selection function in the Bright SHARC survey. For our standard set we adopted the parameters used during the derivation of the Bright SHARC Cluster X-ray Luminosity Function (CXLF), i.e. Omega_0=1, Omega_Lambda=0 and an isothermal Beta model with beta=0.67, r_c=250 kpc and e=0.15. We found that certain parameters have a dramatic effect on our ability to detect clusters, e.g. the presence of a NFW profile or a strong cooling flow profile, or the value of r_c and beta. Other parameters had very little effect, e.g. the type of ROSAT target and the cluster ellipticity. We show also that all the tested parameters have only a small influence on the computed luminosity of the clusters except the presence of a strong cooling flow. We conclude that the CXLF presented in Nichol et al. (1999) is robust (under the assumption of standard parameters), but stress the importance of cluster follow-up in order to better constrain the morphology of the distant clusters found in the Bright SHARC and other surveys.

This publication has 0 references indexed in Scilit: