We present a survey of serendipitous extended X-ray sources and optical cluster candidates from the Chandra Multiwavelength Project (ChaMP). Our main goal is to make an unbiased comparison of X-ray and optical cluster detection methods. In 130 archival Chandra pointings covering 13 deg 2, we use a wavelet decomposition technique to detect 55 extended sources, of which 6 are nearby single galaxies. Our X-ray cluster catalog reaches a typical flux limit of about ~10 -14 ergs cm -2 s -1, with a median cluster core radius of 21 ''. For 56 of the 130 X-ray fields, we use the ChaMP's deep NOAO 4 m MOSAIC g ', r ', and i ' imaging to independently detect cluster candidates using a Voronoi tessellation and percolation (VTP) method. Red-sequence filtering decreases the galaxy fore- and background contamination and provides photometric redshifts to z~0.7. From the overlapping 6.1 deg 2 X-ray/optical imaging, we find 115 optical clusters (of which 11% are in the X-ray catalog) and 28 X-ray clusters (of which 46% are in the optical VTP catalog). The median redshift of the 13 X-ray/optical clusters is 0.41, and their median X-ray luminosity (0.5-2 keV) is L X =(2.65+/-0.19)×10 43 ergs s -1.The clusters in our sample that are only detected in our optical data are poorer on average (~4 σ) than the X-ray/optically matched clusters, which may partially explain the difference in the detection fractions.
CITATION STYLE
Barkhouse, W. A., Green, P. J., Vikhlinin, A., Kim, D. ‐W., Perley, D., Cameron, R., … Wilkes, B. J. (2006). ChaMP Serendipitous Galaxy Cluster Survey. The Astrophysical Journal, 645(2), 955–976. https://doi.org/10.1086/504457
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