2 research outputs found
Spectroscopic Redshift Measurements for Galaxy Clusters from the Planck Survey and Observations of These Clusters in the SRG/eROSITA Survey
Abstract: We present the results of our spectroscopic redshift measurements for galaxy clusters detected previously from Planck all-sky survey data as well as Sloan Digital Sky Survey and WISE all-sky survey data. The redshifts have been measured for 23 clusters, including four galaxy clusters from the second Planck catalogue of Sunyaev–Zeldovich sources. The main spectroscopic observations were carried out during 2019–early 2020 at the 1.6-m AZT-33IK telescope of the Sayan Observatory and the 1.5-m Russian–Turkish telescope (RTT-150). Some of the data have been obtained previously at the 3.5-m Calar Alto telescope. Out of the 23 clusters in this sample, 14 objects are located in the half of the sky where the rights to the data from the eROSITA sky survey onboard the SRG orbital X-ray observatory belong to the Russian side. All these clusters were detected with the eROSITA telescope in the course of the sky survey during 2020. On the whole, we have measured the spectroscopic redshifts for 220 galaxy clusters within our program of optical identifications of galaxy clusters from the Planck catalogue during several years. Many of them have already been detected in the SRG/eROSITA survey; a significant fraction of these objects are among the most massive galaxy clusters of the eROSITA sky survey and will most likely enter into cosmological samples of clusters from this survey
Observation of a Very Massive Galaxy Cluster at z = 0.76 in the SRG/eROSITA All-Sky Survey
Abstract: The results of multiwavelength observations of the very massive galaxy cluster SRGe CL2305.2–2248 detected in X-rays during the first SRG/eROSITA all-sky survey are discussed. This galaxy cluster has also been detected previously in the millimeter band in the South Pole Telescope (SPT-CL J2305–2248) and Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT-CL J2305.1–2248) surveys through the observation of the Sunyaev–Zeldovich effect. The spectroscopic redshift has been measured at the 6-m BTA telescope, z=0.7573. In addition, deep photometric measurements of galaxies have been performed at the Russian–Turkish 1.5-m telescope (RTT-150). The mass of the cluster is estimated from the eROSITA data to be (Formula presented.). We show that this cluster is among several tens of the most massive clusters in the observable Universe and among only a few most massive galaxy clusters at z>0.6