47 research outputs found
A weak lensing analysis of the Abell 383 cluster
In this paper we use deep CFHT and SUBARU archival images of the
Abell 383 cluster (z=0.187) to estimate its mass by weak lensing. To this end,
we first use simulated images to check the accuracy provided by our KSB
pipeline. Such simulations include both the STEP 1 and 2 simulations, and more
realistic simulations of the distortion of galaxy shapes by a cluster with a
Navarro-Frenk-White (NFW) profile. From such simulations we estimate the effect
of noise on shear measurement and derive the correction terms. The R-band image
is used to derive the mass by fitting the observed tangential shear profile
with a NFW mass profile. Photometric redshifts are computed from the uBVRIz
catalogs. Different methods for the foreground/background galaxy selection are
implemented, namely selection by magnitude, color and photometric redshifts,
and results are compared. In particular, we developed a semi-automatic
algorithm to select the foreground galaxies in the color-color diagram, based
on observed colors. Using color selection or photometric redshifts improves the
correction of dilution from foreground galaxies: this leads to higher signals
in the inner parts of the cluster. We obtain a cluster mass that is ~ 20%
higher than previous estimates, and is more consistent the mass expected from
X--ray data. The R-band luminosity function of the cluster is finally computed.Comment: 11 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication on Astronomy &
Astrophysic
Redshifts, Sample Purity, and BCG Positions for the Galaxy Cluster Catalog from the First 720 Square Degrees of the South Pole Telescope Survey
We present the results of the ground- and space-based optical and near-infrared (NIR) follow-up of 224 galaxy cluster candidates detected with the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) effect in the 720 deg^2 of the South Pole Telescope (SPT) survey completed in the 2008 and 2009 observing seasons. We use the optical/NIR data to establish whether each candidate is associated with an overdensity of galaxies and to estimate the cluster redshift. Most photometric redshifts are derived through a combination of three different cluster redshift estimators using red-sequence galaxies, resulting in an accuracy of Δz/(1 + z) = 0.017, determined through comparison with a subsample of 57 clusters for which we have spectroscopic redshifts. We successfully measure redshifts for 158 systems and present redshift lower limits for the remaining candidates. The redshift distribution of the confirmed clusters extends to z = 1.35 with a median of z_(med) = 0.57. Approximately 18% of the sample with measured redshifts lies at z > 0.8. We estimate a lower limit to the purity of this SPT SZ-selected sample by assuming that all unconfirmed clusters are noise fluctuations in the SPT data. We show that the cumulative purity at detection significance ξ > 5(ξ > 4.5) is ≥95% (≥70%). We present the red brightest cluster galaxy (rBCG) positions for the sample and examine the offsets between the SPT candidate position and the rBCG. The radial distribution of offsets is similar to that seen in X-ray-selected cluster samples, providing no evidence that SZ-selected cluster samples include a different fraction of recent mergers from X-ray-selected cluster samples
Weak-Lensing Mass Measurements of Five Galaxy Clusters in the South Pole Telescope Survey Using Magellan/Megacam
We use weak gravitational lensing to measure the masses of five galaxy
clusters selected from the South Pole Telescope (SPT) survey, with the primary
goal of comparing these with the SPT Sunyaev--Zel'dovich (SZ) and X-ray based
mass estimates. The clusters span redshifts 0.28 < z < 0.43 and have masses
M_500 > 2 x 10^14 h^-1 M_sun, and three of the five clusters were discovered by
the SPT survey. We observed the clusters in the g'r'i' passbands with the
Megacam imager on the Magellan Clay 6.5m telescope. We measure a mean ratio of
weak lensing (WL) aperture masses to inferred aperture masses from the SZ data,
both within an aperture of R_500,SZ derived from the SZ mass, of 1.04 +/- 0.18.
We measure a mean ratio of spherical WL masses evaluated at R_500,SZ to
spherical SZ masses of 1.07 +/- 0.18, and a mean ratio of spherical WL masses
evaluated at R_500,WL to spherical SZ masses of 1.10 +/- 0.24. We explore
potential sources of systematic error in the mass comparisons and conclude that
all are subdominant to the statistical uncertainty, with dominant terms being
cluster concentration uncertainty and N-body simulation calibration bias.
Expanding the sample of SPT clusters with WL observations has the potential to
significantly improve the SPT cluster mass calibration and the resulting
cosmological constraints from the SPT cluster survey. These are the first WL
detections using Megacam on the Magellan Clay telescope.Comment: Main body: 18 pages, 7 figures, 6 tables. Appendix: 6 pages, 10
figures. Accepted by ApJ. New version incorporates changes from accepted
articl
Exciton delocalization in the B808-866 antenna of the green bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus as revealed by ultrafast pump-probe spectroscopy.
A model of pigment organization in the B808-866 bacteriochlorophyll a antenna of the green photosynthetic bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus based on femtosecond pump-probe studies is proposed. The building block of the antenna was assumed to be structurally similar to that of the B800-850 light-harvesting 2 (LH2) antenna of purple bacteria and to have the form of two concentric rings of N strongly coupled BChl866 pigments and of N/2 weakly coupled BChl808 monomers, where N = 24 or 32. We have shown that the Qy transition dipoles of BChl808 and BChl866 molecules form the angles 43 degrees +/- 3 degrees and 8 degrees +/- 4 degrees, respectively, with the plane of the corresponding rings. Using the exciton model, we have obtained a quantitative fit of the pump-probe spectra of the B866 and B808 bands. The anomalously high bleaching value of the B866 band with respect to the B808 monomeric band provided the direct evidence for a high degree of exciton delocalization in the BChl866 ring antenna. The coherence length of the steady-state exciton wave packet corresponds to five or six BChl866 molecules at room temperature
Very low-frequency vibrations of bacteriochlorophyll C oligomers in chlorosomes, the main light-harvesting antenna of the green nonsulphur bacterium Chloroflexus aurantiacus
Фотосинтез и фотобиологи
Excitation energy transfer in chlorosomes of green bacteria: theoretical and experimental studies.
A theory of excitation energy transfer within the chlorosomal antennae of green bacteria has been developed for an exciton model of aggregation of bacteriochlorophyll (BChl) c (d or e). This model of six exciton-coupled BChl chains with low packing density, approximating that in vivo, and interchain distances of approximately 2 nm was generated to yield the key spectral features found in natural antennae, i.e., the exciton level structure revealed by spectral hole burning experiments and polarization of all the levels parallel to the long axis of the chlorosome. With picosecond fluorescence spectroscopy it was demonstrated that the theory explains the antenna-size-dependent kinetics of fluorescence decay in chlorosomal antenna, measured for intact cells of different cultures of the green bacterium C. aurantiacus, with different chlorosomal antenna size determined by electron microscopic examination of the ultrathin sections of the cells. The data suggest a possible mechanism of excitation energy transfer within the chlorosome that implies the formation of a cylindrical exciton, delocalized over a tubular aggregate of BChl c chains, and Forster-type transfer of such a cylindrical exciton between the nearest tubular BChl c aggregates as well as to BChl a of the baseplate