101 research outputs found

    The mass-concentration relation in massive galaxy clusters at redshift ~1

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    Mass and concentration of clusters of galaxies are related and evolving with redshift. We study the properties of a sample of 31 massive galaxy clusters at high redshift, 0.8 < z < 1.5, using weak and strong lensing observations. Concentration is a steep function of mass, c_{200} ~M_{200}^{-0.83 +-0.39}, with higher-redshift clusters being less concentrated. Mass and concentration from the stacked analysis, M_{200}=(4.1+-0.4)x10^{14}M_Sun/h and c_{200}=2.3+-0.2, are in line with theoretical results extrapolated from the local universe. Clusters with signs of dynamical activity preferentially feature high concentrations. We discuss the possibility that the whole sample is a mix of two different kinds of haloes. Over-concentrated clusters might be accreting haloes out of equilibrium in a transient phase of compression, whereas less concentrated ones might be more relaxed.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures; in press on MNRA

    A multi-wavelength study of the gravitational lens COSMOS J095930+023427

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    We present a multi-wavelength study of the gravitational lens COSMOS J095930+023427 (z=0.89), together with the associated galaxy group located at z∼0.7z\sim0.7 along the line of sight and the lensed background galaxy. The source redshift is currently unknown, but estimated to be at zs∼2z_s \sim 2. The analysis is based on the available public HST, Subaru, Chandra imaging data, and VLT spectroscopy. The lensing system is an early-type galaxy showing a strong [OII] emission line, and produces 4 bright images of the distant background source. It has an Einstein radius of 0.79", about 4 times large than the effective radius. We perform a lensing analysis using both a Singular Isothermal Ellipsoid (SIE) and a Peudo-Isothermal Elliptical Mass Distribution (PIEMD) for the lensing galaxy, and find that the final results on the total mass, the dark matter (DM) fraction within the Einstein radius and the external shear due to a foreground galaxy group are robust with respect of the choice of the parametric model and the source redshift (yet unknown). We measure the luminous mass from the photometric data, and find the DM fraction within the Einstein radius fDMf_{\rm DM} to be between 0.71±0.130.71\pm 0.13 and 0.79±0.150.79 \pm 0.15, depending on the unknown source redshift. Meanwhile, the non-null external shear found in our lensing models supports the presence and structure of a galaxy group at z∼0.7z\sim0.7, and an independent measurement of the 0.5-2 keV X-ray luminosity within 20" around the X-ray centroid provides a group mass of M=(3−10)×1013M=(3-10)\times 10^{13} M⊙_{\odot}, in good agreement with the previous estimate derived through weak lensing analysis.Comment: 13 pages, 6 figure

    Measurement of the halo bias from stacked shear profiles of galaxy clusters

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    We present the observational evidence of the 2-halo term in the stacked shear profile of a sample of about 1200 optically selected galaxy clusters based on imaging data and the public shear catalog from the CFHTLenS. We find that the halo bias, a measure of the correlated distribution of matter around galaxy clusters, has amplitude and correlation with galaxy cluster mass in very good agreement with the predictions based on the LCDM standard cosmological model. The mass-concentration relation is flat but higher than theoretical predictions. We also confirm the close scaling relation between the optical richness of galaxy clusters and their mass.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. In press on ApJ Letter

    PSZ2LenS. Weak lensing analysis of the Planck clusters in the CFHTLenS and in the RCSLenS

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    The possibly unbiased selection process in surveys of the Sunyaev Zel'dovich effect can unveil new populations of galaxy clusters. We performed a weak lensing analysis of the PSZ2LenS sample, i.e. the PSZ2 galaxy clusters detected by the Planck mission in the sky portion covered by the lensing surveys CFHTLenS and RCSLenS. PSZ2LenS consists of 35 clusters and it is a statistically complete and homogeneous subsample of the PSZ2 catalogue. The Planck selected clusters appear to be unbiased tracers of the massive end of the cosmological haloes. The mass concentration relation of the sample is in excellent agreement with predictions from the Lambda cold dark matter model. The stacked lensing signal is detected at 14 sigma significance over the radial range 0.1<R<3.2 Mpc/h, and is well described by the cuspy dark halo models predicted by numerical simulations. We confirmed that Planck estimated masses are biased low by b_SZ= 27+-11(stat)+-8(sys) per cent with respect to weak lensing masses. The bias is higher for the cosmological subsample, b_SZ= 40+-14+-(stat)+-8(sys) per cent.Comment: v1: 23 pages. Comments are welcome. v2: 27 pages, in press on MNRAS. Expanded discussion on systematics and lensing average

    Source plane reconstruction of the giant gravitational arc in Abell 2667: a candidate Wolf-Rayet galaxy at z~1

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    We present a new analysis of HST, Spitzer telescope imaging and VLT imaging and spectroscopic data of a bright lensed galaxy at zz=1.0334 in the lensing cluster Abell~2667. Using this high-resolution imaging we present an updated lens model that allows us to fully understand the lensing geometry and reconstruct the lensed galaxy in the source plane. This giant arc gives a unique opportunity to peer into the structure of a high-redshift disk galaxy. We find that the lensed galaxy of Abell 2667 is a typical spiral galaxy with morphology similar to the structure of its counterparts at higher redshift z∼2z\sim 2. The surface brightness of the reconstructed source galaxy in the z850_{850} band reveals the central surface brightness I(0)=20.28±0.22I(0)=20.28\pm0.22 mag arcsec−2^{-2} and the characteristic radius rs=2.01±0.16r_s=2.01\pm0.16 kpc at redshift z∼1z \sim 1. The morphological reconstruction in different bands shows obvious negative radial color gradients for this galaxy. Moreover, the redder central bulge tends to contain a metal-rich stellar population, rather than being heavily reddened by dust due to high and patchy obscuration. We analyze the VIMOS/IFU spectroscopic data and find that, in the given wavelength range (∼1800−3200\sim 1800-3200 \AA), the combined arc spectrum of the source galaxy is characterized by a strong continuum emission with strong UV absorption lines (FeII and MgII) and shows the features of a typical starburst Wolf-Rayet galaxy NGC5253. More specifically, we have measured the EWs of FeII and MgII lines in the Abell 2667 spectrum, and obtained similar values for the same wavelength interval of the NGC5253 spectrum. Marginal evidence for CIII] 1909 emission at the edge of the grism range further confirms our expectation.Comment: 20 pages, 7 figures, 1 table, accepted by the Astronomical Journa

    Mass-concentration relation of clusters of galaxies from CFHTLenS

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    Based on weak lensing data from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope Lensing Survey (CFHTLenS), in this paper we study the mass-concentration (MM-cc) relation for ∼200\sim 200 redMaPPer clusters in the fields. We extract the MM-cc relation by measuring the density profiles of individual clusters instead of using stacked weak lensing signals. By performing Monte Carlo simulations, we demonstrate that although the signal-to-noise ratio for each individual cluster is low, the unbiased MM-cc relation can still be reliably derived from a large sample of clusters by carefully taking into account the impacts of shape noise, cluster center offset, dilution effect from member or foreground galaxies, and the projection effect. Our results show that within error bars the derived MM-cc relation for redMaPPer clusters is in agreement with simulation predictions. There is a weak deviation in that the halo concentrations calibrated by Monte Carlo simulations are somewhat higher than that predicted from Planck{\it Planck} cosmology.Comment: Accepted for Publication in ApJ. 18 pages, 8 figures. Updated to match the published versio

    LEMON:LEns MOdelling with Neural networks - I. Automated modelling of strong gravitational lenses with Bayesian Neural Networks

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    The unprecedented number of gravitational lenses expected from new-generation facilities such as the ESA Euclid telescope and the Vera Rubin Observatory makes it crucial to rethink our classical approach to lens-modelling. In this paper, we present LEMON (Lens Modelling with Neural networks): a new machine-learning algorithm able to analyse hundreds of thousands of gravitational lenses in a reasonable amount of time. The algorithm is based on a Bayesian Neural Network: a new generation of neural networks able to associate a reliable confidence interval to each predicted parameter. We train the algorithm to predict the three main parameters of the singular isothermal ellipsoid model (the Einstein radius and the two components of the ellipticity) by employing two simulated data sets built to resemble the imaging capabilities of the Hubble Space Telescope and the forthcoming Euclid satellite. In this work, we assess the accuracy of the algorithm and the reliability of the estimated uncertainties by applying the network to several simulated data sets of 104 images each. We obtain accuracies comparable to previous studies present in the current literature and an average modelling time of just ∼0.5 s per lens. Finally, we apply the LEMON algorithm to a pilot data set of real lenses observed with HST during the SLACS program, obtaining unbiased estimates of their SIE parameters. The code is publicly available on GitHub (https://github.com/fab-gentile/LEMON).</p

    CASCO: Cosmological and AStrophysical parameters from Cosmological simulations and Observations -- I. Constraining physical processes in local star-forming galaxies

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    We compare the structural properties and dark matter content of star-forming galaxies taken from the CAMELS cosmological simulations to the observed trends derived from the SPARC sample in the stellar mass range [109,1011] M⊙[10^{9}, 10^{11}]\,\textrm{M}_{\odot}, to provide constraints on the value of cosmological and astrophysical (SN- and AGN-related) parameters. We consider the size-, internal DM fraction-, internal DM mass- and total-stellar mass relations for all the 1065 simulations from the IllustrisTNG, SIMBA and ASTRID suites of CAMELS, and search for the parameters that minimize the χ2\chi^{2} with respect to the observations. For the IllustrisTNG suite, we find the following constraints for the cosmological parameters: Ωm=0.27−0.05+0.01\Omega_{\textrm{m}} = 0.27_{-0.05}^{+0.01}, σ8=0.83−0.11+0.08\sigma_{8} = 0.83_{-0.11}^{+0.08} and S8=0.78−0.09+0.03S_{8} = 0.78_{-0.09}^{+0.03}, which are consistent within 1σ1\sigma with the results from the nine-year WMAP observations. SN feedback-related astrophysical parameters, which describe the departure of outflow wind energy per unit star formation rate and wind velocity from the reference IllustrisTNG simulations, assume the following values: ASN1=0.48−0.16+0.25A_{\textrm{SN1}} = 0.48_{-0.16}^{+0.25} and ASN2=1.21−0.34+0.03A_{\textrm{SN2}} = 1.21_{-0.34}^{+0.03}, respectively. Therefore, simulations with a lower value of outflow wind energy per unit star formation rate with respect to the reference illustrisTNG simulation better reproduce the observations. Simulations based on SIMBA and ASTRID suites predict central dark matter masses substantially larger than those observed in real galaxies, which can be reconciled with observations only by requiring values of Ωm\Omega_{\textrm{m}} inconsistent with cosmological constraints for SIMBA, or simulations characterized by unrealistic galaxy mass distributions for ASTRID.Comment: 24 pages, 10 figures, 9 tables. Accepted by MNRAS for publication; Added a reference to sec. 4.
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