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We present predictions for characteristics of the X-ray cluster population expected to be observed by the ROSAT satellite. The theoretical modeling requires an assumed fluctuation Spectrum and relations describing the behavior of cluster X-ray luminosity and core radius with cluster binding mass and redshift. The most "natural" model, which assumes self-similar scaling Lₓ_ is proportional to M⁴/3^ in a cold dark matter (CDM) universe, fails to reproduce the shape of the local X-ray cluster luminosity function. For CDM to be successful, the bolometric X-ray luminosity Lₓ_ must scale with binding mass M as Lₓ_ is proportional to M³^, perhaps indicative of a strong dependence of intracluster gas fraction with mass. An alternative model motivated by recent evidence for more large-scale power, uses an n = - 2 initial fluctuation spectrum and fits local cluster abundances with an intermediate scaling Lₓ_ is proportional to M¹1/6^, This scaling law may imply a fixed minimum entropy for the gas in the cores of rich clusters, perhaps a signature of activity from an earlier galaxy formation era. For the north ecliptic pole region of the ROSAT all-sky survey, which will cover a 10ᵈeg^ radius field to a limiting flux of roughly 9 x 10^-14^ ergs s^-1^ cm ^-2^, the successful models predict ~330 cluster X-ray sources visible above the flux limit if a square detect cell of side 4. 8' is employed. The clusters would have a median redshift of 0. 2, and 10% of them should have z > 0. 4 but essentially none should be seen at z > 1. Roughly 2500 clusters are expected with this detect geometry In the all sky survey above the limiting flux of 7 x 10^-13^ ergs s^-1^ cm ^-2^ Cluster sources would be expected to contribute ~10% of the observed soft X-ray back-ground. The sensitivity of cluster detectability to treatment of the core emission and detect cell geometry is the principal source of uncertainty in these predictions.
Evrard et al. (Sun,) studied this question.