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We present the results from two-point spatial correlation analyses on X-ray confirmed northern Abell clusters. The cluster samples are subsets of a volume-limited ROSAT All-Sky Survey study of 294 Abell clusters of which 240 are X-ray luminous. We examined magnitude- and volume-complete samples for differences according to richness and X-ray luminosity. For R>=1 clusters, we find r_0 = 22h^-1Mpc and gamma = -1.7, which is consistent with previous analyses of visually selected clusters. We also find no indications of line-of-sight anisotropies. For R >= 0 clusters, we find r_0= 17.5h^-1Mpc which is considerably lower than recent determinations of r_0 for similar X-ray bright cluster samples (e.g. the XBACs and the RASS1 clusters). All of the R>=0 X-ray confirmed samples, including the XBACs and RASS1 clusters, show line-of-sight anisotropies. Since X-ray emissions confirm a clusters reality, we conclude that these anisotropies are not the result of spuriously selected clusters. We also examine the Abell clusters for the depedence of r_0 and gamma on X-ray luminosity, and find no evidence for r_0 to grow with increasing X-ray luminosity thresholds. This is contrary to similar L_x vs. r_0 analyses of the RASS1 and XBACs cluster samples. We describe selection effects within the flux-limited XBACs and RASS1 samples and suggest how they can affect both the size of r_0 and its dependence on L_x.
In the weak field regime, gravitational waves can be considered as being made up of collisionless, relativistic tensor modes that travel along null geodesics of the perturbed background metric. We work in this geometric optics picture to calculate th
We discuss the measurements of the galaxy cluster mass functions at z=~0.05 and z=~0.5 using high-quality Chandra observations of samples derived from the ROSAT PSPC All-Sky and 400deg^2 surveys. We provide a full reference for the data analysis proc
Up to now, the largest sample of galaxy clusters selected in X-rays comes from the ROSAT All-Sky Survey (RASS). Although there have been many interesting clusters discovered with the RASS data, the broad point spread function (PSF) of the ROSAT satel
We report the discovery of a massive, X-ray-luminous cluster of galaxies at z=1.393, the most distant X-ray-selected cluster found to date. XMMU J2235.3-2557 was serendipitously detected as an extended X-ray source in an archival XMM-Newton observati
In this paper we present the best quality XMM-Newton and Suzaku data from M82 X-1 so far. We analyze the spectra of this remarkable Ultra-Luminous X-ray Source in a self-consistent manner. We have disentangled emission from the host galaxy, responsib