45 research outputs found
The Contribution of Halos with Different Mass Ratios to the Overall Growth of Cluster-sized Halos
We provide a new observational test for a key prediction of the ÎCDM cosmological model: the contributions of mergers with different halo-to-main-cluster mass ratios to cluster-sized halo growth. We perform this test by dynamically analyzing 7 galaxy clusters, spanning the redshift range 0.13 < z_c < 0.45 and caustic mass range 0.4-1.5 10^(15)h_(0.73)^(-1) M_â, with an average of 293 spectroscopically confirmed bound galaxies to each cluster. The large radial coverage (a few virial radii), which covers the whole infall region, with a high number of spectroscopically identified galaxies enables this new study. For each cluster, we identify bound galaxies. Out of these galaxies, we identify infalling and accreted halos and estimate their masses and their dynamical states. Using the estimated masses, we derive the contribution of different mass ratios to cluster-sized halo growth. For mass ratios between ~0.2 and ~0.7, we find a ~1Ï agreement with ÎCDM expectations based on the Millennium simulations I and II. At low mass ratios, ⟠0.2, our derived contribution is underestimated since the detection efficiency decreases at low masses, ~2 Ă 10^(14) h_(0.73)^(-1) M_â. At large mass ratios, âł 0.7, we do not detect halos probably because our sample, which was chosen to be quite X-ray relaxed, is biased against large mass ratios. Therefore, at large mass ratios, the derived contribution is also underestimated
Mass and Gas Profiles in A1689: Joint X-ray and Lensing Analysis
We carry out a comprehensive joint analysis of high quality HST/ACS and
Chandra measurements of A1689, from which we derive mass, temperature, X-ray
emission and abundance profiles. The X-ray emission is smooth and symmetric,
and the lensing mass is centrally concentrated indicating a relaxed cluster.
Assuming hydrostatic equilibrium we deduce a 3D mass profile that agrees
simultaneously with both the lensing and X-ray measurements. However, the
projected temperature profile predicted with this 3D mass profile exceeds the
observed temperature by ~30% at all radii, a level of discrepancy comparable to
the level found for other relaxed clusters. This result may support recent
suggestions from hydrodynamical simulations that denser, more X-ray luminous
small-scale structure can bias observed temperature measurements downward at
about the same (~30%) level. We determine the gas entropy at 0.1r_{vir} (where
r_{vir} is the virial radius) to be ~800 keV cm^2, as expected for a high
temperature cluster, but its profile at >0.1r_{vir} has a power-law form with
index ~0.8, considerably shallower than the ~1.1 index advocated by theoretical
studies and simulations. Moreover, if a constant entropy ''floor'' exists at
all, then it is within a small region in the inner core, r<0.02r_{vir}, in
accord with previous theoretical studies of massive clusters.Comment: 18 pages, 20 figures, 7 tables, accepted for publication in MNRAS,
minor changes to match published versio
XMM-Newton Spectroscopy of the Starburst Dominated Ultra Luminous Infrared Galaxy NGC 6240
We present new XMM-Newton observation of the Ultra Luminous Infrared Galaxy
(ULIRG) NGC 6240. We analyze the reflecting grating spectrometer (RGS) data,
and data from the other instruments, and find a starburst dominated 0.5-3 keV
spectrum with global properties resembling those observed in M82 but with a
much higher luminosity. We show that the starburst region can be divided into
an outer zone, beyond a radius of about 2.1 kpc, with a gas temperature of
about 10^7 K and a central region with temperatures in the range (2-6) x 10^7
K. The gas in the outer region emits most of the observed Oviii Lyman-alpha
line and the gas in the inner region the emission lines of higher ionization
ions, including a strong Fexxv line. We also identify a small inner part, very
close to the active nuclei, with typical Seyfert 2 properties including a large
amount of photoionized gas producing a strong Fe K-alpha 6.4 keV line. The
combined abundance, temperature and emission measure analysis indicates super
solar Ne/O, Mg/O, Si/O, S/O and possibly also Fe/O. The analysis suggests
densities in the range of (0.07-0.28) x epsilon^(-1/2) cm^(-3) and a total
thermal gas mass of about 4 x 10^8 x epsilon^(1/2) solar masses, where epsilon
is the volume filling factor. We used a simple model to argue that a massive
starburst with an age of about 2 x 10^7 years can explain most of the observed
properties of the source. NGC 6240 is perhaps the clearest case of an X-ray
bright luminous AGN, in a merger, whose soft X-ray spectrum is dominated by a
powerful starburst.Comment: 10 pages, 6 diagrams, accepted by ApJ, added a few minor change
Dynamical Study of A1689 from Wide-Field VLT/VIMOS Spectroscopy: Mass Profile, Concentration Parameter, and Velocity Anisotropy
We examine the dynamics structure of the rich cluster A1689, combining
VLT/VIMOS spectroscopy with Subaru/Suprime-Cam imaging. The radial velocity
distribution of cluster members is bounded by a pair of clearly
defined velocity caustics, with a maximum amplitude of km/s at
300 h kpc, beyond which the amplitude steadily declines,
approaching zero velocity at a limiting radius of 2 h Mpc. We
derive the 3D velocity anisotropy and galaxy number density profiles using a
model-independent method to solve the Jeans equation, simultaneously
incorporating the observed velocity dispersion profile, the galaxy counts from
deep Subaru imaging, and our previously derived cluster mass profile from a
joint lensing and X-ray analysis. The velocity anisotropy is found to be
predominantly radial at large radius, becoming increasingly tangential towards
the center, in accord with expectations. We also analyze the galaxy data
independently of our previous analysis using two different methods: The first
is based on a solution of the Jeans equation assuming an NFW form for the mass
distribution, whereas in the second method the caustic amplitude is used to
determine the escape velocity. The cluster virial mass derived by both of these
dynamical methods is in good agreement with results from our earlier lensing
and X-ray analysis. We also confirm the high NFW concentration parameter, with
results from both methods combined to yield (1). The
inferred virial radius is consistent with the limiting radius where the
caustics approach zero velocity and where the counts of cluster members drop
off, suggesting that infall onto A1689 is currently not significant.Comment: 12 pages, 10 figures, accepted for publication in Ap
Three-dimensional Multi-probe Analysis of the Galaxy Cluster A1689
We perform a 3D multi-probe analysis of the rich galaxy cluster A1689 by
combining improved weak-lensing data from new BVRi'z' Subaru/Suprime-Cam
observations with strong-lensing, X-ray, and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZE)
data sets. We reconstruct the projected matter distribution from a joint
weak-lensing analysis of 2D shear and azimuthally integrated magnification
constraints, the combination of which allows us to break the mass-sheet
degeneracy. The resulting mass distribution reveals elongation with axis ratio
~0.7 in projection. When assuming a spherical halo, our full weak-lensing
analysis yields a projected concentration of
(), consistent with and improved from earlier weak-lensing
work. We find excellent consistency between weak and strong lensing in the
region of overlap. In a parametric triaxial framework, we constrain the
intrinsic structure and geometry of the matter and gas distributions, by
combining weak/strong lensing and X-ray/SZE data with minimal geometric
assumptions. We show that the data favor a triaxial geometry with minor-major
axis ratio 0.39+/-0.15 and major axis closely aligned with the line of sight
(22+/-10 deg). We obtain and
, which overlaps with the tail of the predicted
distribution. The shape of the gas is rounder than the underlying matter but
quite elongated with minor-major axis ratio 0.60+/-0.14. The gas mass fraction
within 0.9Mpc is 10^{+3}_{-2}%. The thermal gas pressure contributes to ~60% of
the equilibrium pressure, indicating a significant level of non-thermal
pressure support. When compared to Planck's hydrostatic mass estimate, our
lensing measurements yield a spherical mass ratio of and with and without corrections for lensing projection
effects, respectively.Comment: Accepted by ApJ. Minor textual changes to improve clarity (e.g., 5.
HST STRONG-LENSING ANALYSIS). 26 pages, 17 figures. A version with
high-resolution figures is available at
http://www.asiaa.sinica.edu.tw/~keiichi/upfiles/Umetsu15/umetsu15.pd
Profiles of Dark Matter Velocity Anisotropy in Simulated Clusters
We report statistical results for dark matter (DM) velocity anisotropy,
\beta, from a sample of some 6000 cluster-size halos (at redshift zero)
identified in a \Lambda CDM hydrodynamical adaptive mesh refinement simulation
performed with the Enzo code. These include profiles of \beta\ in clusters with
different masses, relaxation states, and at several redshifts, modeled both as
spherical and triaxial DM configurations. Specifically, although we find a
large scatter in the DM velocity anisotropy profiles of different halos (across
elliptical shells extending to at least ~), universal patterns are
found when these are averaged over halo mass, redshift, and relaxation stage.
These are characterized by a very small velocity anisotropy at the halo center,
increasing outward to about 0.27 and leveling off at about .
Indirect measurements of the DM velocity anisotropy fall on the upper end of
the theoretically expected range. Though measured indirectly, the estimations
are derived by using two different surrogate measurements - X-ray and galaxy
dynamics. Current estimates of the DM velocity anisotropy are based on very
small cluster sample. Increasing this sample will allow testing theoretical
predictions, including the speculation that the decay of DM particles results
in a large velocity boost. We also find, in accord with previous works, that
halos are triaxial and likely to be more prolate when unrelaxed, whereas
relaxed halos are more likely to be oblate. Our analysis does not indicate that
there is significant correlation (found in some previous studies) between the
radial density slope, \gamma, and \beta\ at large radii, .Comment: 12 pages, 17 figures, accepted to Ap
CLASH: Weak-Lensing Shear-and-Magnification Analysis of 20 Galaxy Clusters
We present a joint shear-and-magnification weak-lensing analysis of a sample
of 16 X-ray-regular and 4 high-magnification galaxy clusters at 0.19<z<0.69
selected from the Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH). Our
analysis uses wide-field multi-color imaging, taken primarily with Suprime-Cam
on the Subaru Telescope. From a stacked shear-only analysis of the
X-ray-selected subsample, we detect the ensemble-averaged lensing signal with a
total signal-to-noise ratio of ~25 in the radial range of 200 to 3500kpc/h. The
stacked tangential-shear signal is well described by a family of standard
density profiles predicted for dark-matter-dominated halos in gravitational
equilibrium, namely the Navarro-Frenk-White (NFW), truncated variants of NFW,
and Einasto models. For the NFW model, we measure a mean concentration of
at . We show this is in excellent agreement with Lambda
cold-dark-matter (LCDM) predictions when the CLASH X-ray selection function and
projection effects are taken into account. The best-fit Einasto shape parameter
is , which is consistent with the
NFW-equivalent Einasto parameter of . We reconstruct projected mass
density profiles of all CLASH clusters from a joint likelihood analysis of
shear-and-magnification data, and measure cluster masses at several
characteristic radii. We also derive an ensemble-averaged total projected mass
profile of the X-ray-selected subsample by stacking their individual mass
profiles. The stacked total mass profile, constrained by the
shear+magnification data, is shown to be consistent with our shear-based
halo-model predictions including the effects of surrounding large-scale
structure as a two-halo term, establishing further consistency in the context
of the LCDM model.Comment: Accepted by ApJ on 11 August 2014. Textual changes to improve clarity
(e.g., Sec.3.2.2 "Number-count Depletion", Sec.4.3 "Shape Measurement",
Sec.4.4 "Background Galaxy Selection"). Results and conclusions remain
unchanged. For the public release of Subaru data, see
http://archive.stsci.edu/prepds/clash
CLASH: Extreme Emission Line Galaxies and Their Implication on Selection of High-Redshift Galaxies
We utilize the CLASH (Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble)
observations of 25 clusters to search for extreme emission-line galaxies
(EELGs). The selections are carried out in two central bands: F105W (Y105) and
F125W (J125), as the flux of the central bands could be enhanced by the
presence of [O III] 4959, 5007 at redshift of about 0.93-1.14 and 1.57-1.79,
respectively. The multi-band observations help to constrain the equivalent
widths of emission lines. Thanks to cluster lensing, we are able to identify 52
candidates down to an intrinsic limiting magnitude of 28.5 and to a rest-frame
[O III] 4959,5007 equivalent width of about 3737 angstrom. Our samples include
a number of EELGs at lower luminosities that are missed in other surveys, and
the extremely high equivalent width can be only found in such faint galaxies.
These EELGs can mimic the dropout feature similar to that of high redshift
galaxies and contaminate the color-color selection of high redshift galaxies
when the S/N ratio is limited or the band coverage is incomplete. We predict
that the fraction of EELGs in the future high redshift galaxy selections cannot
be neglected.Comment: 17 pages, 9 figures, 2 tables, Accepted for publication in AP
CLASH-X: A Comparison of Lensing and X-ray Techniques for Measuring the Mass Profiles of Galaxy Clusters
We present profiles of temperature (Tx), gas mass, and hydrostatic mass
estimated from new and archival X-ray observations of CLASH clusters. We
compare measurements derived from XMM and Chandra observations with one another
and compare both to gravitational lensing mass profiles derived with CLASH HST
and ground-based lensing data. Radial profiles of Chandra and XMM electron
density and enclosed gas mass are nearly identical, indicating that differences
in hydrostatic masses inferred from X-ray observations arise from differences
in Tx measurements. Encouragingly, cluster Txs are consistent with one another
at ~100-200 kpc radii but XMM Tx systematically decline relative to Chandra Tx
at larger radii. The angular dependence of the discrepancy suggests additional
investigation on systematics such as the XMM point spread function correction,
vignetting and off-axis responses. We present the CLASH-X mass-profile
comparisons in the form of cosmology-independent and redshift-independent
circular-velocity profiles. Ratios of Chandra HSE mass profiles to CLASH
lensing profiles show no obvious radial dependence in the 0.3-0.8 Mpc range.
However, the mean mass biases inferred from the WL and SaWLens data are
different. e.g., the weighted-mean value at 0.5 Mpc is = 0.12 for the WL
comparison and = -0.11 for the SaWLens comparison. The ratios of XMM HSE
mass profiles to CLASH lensing profiles show a pronounced radial dependence in
the 0.3-1.0 Mpc range, with a weighted mean mass bias of value rising to
~0.3 at ~1 Mpc for the WL comparison and of 0.25 for SaWLens comparison.
The enclosed gas mass profiles from both Chandra and XMM rise to a value 1/8
times the total-mass profiles inferred from lensing at 0.5 Mpc and remain
constant outside of that radius, suggesting that [8xMgas] profiles may be an
excellent proxy for total-mass profiles at >0.5 Mpc in massive galaxy clusters.Comment: Accepted to ApJ; 24 pages; scheduled to appear in the Oct 10, 2014
issue. This version corrects the typographical error in the superscripts for
Equation (2) to include the square of (r/r_core). The correct version of this
equation was used in the analysi