The Wide Angle ROSAT Pointed Survey


The WARPS cluster survey is an international collaboration to compile and investigate the properties of an x-ray selected sample of galaxy clusters out to high redshifts and down to low x-ray luminosities.

Since galaxy clusters are the largest gravitationally bound aggregates to have decoupled from the Hubble expansion, they offer a unique probe of cosmologically interesting quantities. In particular, the abundance and evolutionary properties of clusters reveal important clues to understanding the formation of structures in the Universe and the values of fundamental cosmological parameters.

Large samples of clusters are essential to studying the evolution of large-scale structure in the universe. Until recently, such studies were based on optically selected samples which (while large) have the disadvantage of being biased by projection effects. X-ray surveys are a much less biased way to select large samples of clusters, as x-ray emission originates from diffuse gas at T ~ 107-108 K trapped in a deep potential well. Searching for clusters with x-ray observations is therefore very efficient and also provides information about the cluster gravitational potential.

The Wide Angle ROSAT Pointed Survey (WARPS) is based entirely on serendipitous source detections in ROSAT pointed observations archived at the HEASARC at the Laboratory for High Energy Astrophysics at Goddard Space Flight Center. The cluster sample is compiled from PSPC pointed observations of non-cluster targets at |b| > 20° with texp > 8ks. Our detection algorithm, VTP, detects sources of arbitrary shape with equal efficiency, and is particularly sensitive to low-surface brightness emission. WARPS is the only x-ray cluster survey which has tested the efficacy of its approach by optically imaging all x-ray sources in our initial sample lacking counterparts on sky survey plates. This test is crucial to the completeness of any x-ray selected cluster sample.

More information on clusters of galaxies is available from the High-Energy Astrophysics Learning Center.

Status of WARPS

  • Catalog paper for the WARPS-II sample of ~300 fields has been published by ApJS.

On-Line Resources

WARPS Publications

The WARPS cluster collaboration (in alphabetical order)


Last modified: Thu Jun 19 15:20:43 EDT 2008
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