9,051 research outputs found

    Comparing Masses in Literature (CoMaLit)-I. Bias and scatter in weak lensing and X-ray mass estimates of clusters

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    The first building block to use galaxy clusters in astrophysics and cosmology is the accurate determination of their mass. Two of the most well regarded direct mass estimators are based on weak lensing (WL) determinations or X-ray analyses assuming hydrostatic equilibrium (HE). By comparing these two mass measurements in samples of rich clusters, we determined the intrinsic scatters, σWL∼\sigma_\mathrm{WL}\sim15 per cent for WL masses and σHE∼\sigma_\mathrm{HE}\sim25 per cent for HE masses. The certain assessment of the bias is hampered by differences as large as ∼\sim40 per cent in either WL or HE mass estimates reported by different groups. If the intrinsic scatter in the mass estimate is not considered, the slope of any scaling relation `observable--mass' is biased towards shallower values, whereas the intrinsic scatter of the scaling is over-estimated.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures; v2: 16 pages, 8 figures, MNRAS in press; results unchanged; extended presentation of the statistical method and of the correlations; products from the CoMaLit series are hosted and updated at http://pico.bo.astro.it/~sereno/CoMaLi

    Cosmological interpretation of the color-magnitude diagrams of galaxy clusters

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    We investigate the color-magnitude diagram (CMD) of cluster galaxies in the hierarchical Λ\Lambda-CDM cosmological scenario using both single stellar populations and simple galaxy models. First, we analyze the effect of bursts and mergers and companion chemical pollution and rejuvenation of the stellar content on the integrated light emitted by galaxies. The dispersion of the galaxy magnitudes and colors on the MV−(B−V)M_V-(B-V) plane is mainly due to mixing of ages and metallicities of the stellar populations, with mergers weighting more than bursts of similar mass fractions. The analysis is made using the Monte-Carlo technique applied to ideal model galaxies reduced to single stellar populations with galaxy-size mass to evaluate mass, age and metallicity of each object. We show that separately determining the contributions by bursts and mergers leads to a better understanding of observed properties of CMD of cluster galaxies. Then we repeat the analysis using suitable chemo-photometric models of galaxies whose mass is derived from the cosmological predictions of the galaxy content of typical clusters. Using the halo mass function and the Monte-Carlo technique, we derive the formation redshift of each galaxy and its photometric history. These are used to simulate the CMD of the cluster galaxies. The main conclusion is that most massive galaxies have acquired the red color they show today in very early epochs and remained the same ever since. The simulations nicely reproduce the Red Sequence, the Green Valley and the Blue Cloud, the three main regions of the CMD in which galaxies crowd.Comment: Accepted for publication in Ap

    The parallelism between galaxy clusters and early-type galaxies: I. The light and mass profiles

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    We have analyzed the parallelism between the properties of galaxy clusters and early-type galaxies (ETGs) by looking at the similarity between their light profiles. We find that the equivalent luminosity profiles of all these systems in the \vfilt\ band, once normalized to the effective radius \re\ and shifted in surface brightness, can be fitted by the S\'ersic's law \Sers\ and superposed with a small scatter (≤0.3\le0.3 mag). By grouping objects in different classes of luminosity, the average profile of each class slightly deviates from the other only in the inner and outer regions (outside 0.1≤r/Re≤30.1\leq r/R_e\leq 3), but the range of values of nn remains ample for the members of each class, indicating that objects with similar luminosity have quite different shapes. The "Illustris" simulation reproduces quite well the luminosity profiles of ETGs, with the exception of in the inner and outer regions where feedback from supernovae and active galactic nuclei, wet and dry mergers, are at work. The total mass and luminosity of galaxy clusters as well as their light profiles are not well reproduced. By exploiting simulations we have followed the variation of the effective half-light and half-mass radius of ETGs up to z=0.8z=0.8, noting that progenitors are not necessarily smaller in size than current objects. We have also analyzed the projected dark+baryonic and dark-only mass profiles discovering that after a normalization to the half-mass radius, they can be well superposed and fitted by the S\'ersic's law.Comment: 25 pages, 19 figure

    CoMaLit - II. The scaling relation between mass and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich signal for Planck selected galaxy clusters

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    We discuss the scaling relation between mass and integrated Compton parameter of a sample of galaxy clusters from the all-sky {\it Planck} Sunyaev-Zel'dovich catalogue. Masses were measured with either weak lensing, caustics techniques, or assuming hydrostatic equilibrium. The retrieved Y500Y_{500}-M500M_{500} relation does not strongly depend on the calibration sample. We found a slope of 1.4-1.9, in agreement with self-similar predictions, with an intrinsic scatter of 20±1020\pm10 per cent. The absolute calibration of the relation can not be ascertained due to systematic differences of ∼\sim20-40 per cent in mass estimates reported by distinct groups. Due to the scatter, the slope of the conditional scaling relation, to be used in cosmological studies of number counts, is shallower, ∼\sim1.1-1.6. The regression methods employed account for intrinsic scatter in the mass measurements too. We found that Planck mass estimates suffer from a mass dependent bias.Comment: 14 pages, 7 figures; v2: 17 pages, 11 figures; MNRAS in press, results unchanged; extended discussion of the Planck calibration sample; added discussion of conditional vs symmetric scaling relations and of mixture of Gaussian functions as distribution of the independent variable; products from the CoMaLit series at http://pico.bo.astro.it/~sereno/CoMaLi

    Mass, shape and thermal properties of A1689 by a multi-wavelength X-ray, lensing and Sunyaev-Zel'dovich analysis

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    Knowledge of mass and concentration of galaxy clusters is crucial to understand their formation and evolution. Unbiased estimates require the understanding of the shape and orientation of the halo as well as its equilibrium status. We propose a novel method to determine the intrinsic properties of galaxy clusters from a multi-wavelength data set spanning from X-ray spectroscopic and photometric data to gravitational lensing to the Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect (SZe). The method relies on two quite non informative geometrical assumptions: the distributions of total matter or gas are approximately ellipsoidal and co-aligned; they have different, constant axial ratios but share the same degree of triaxiality. Weak and strong lensing probe the features of the total mass distribution in the plane of the sky. X-ray data measure size and orientation of the gas in the plane of the sky. Comparison with the SZ amplitude fixes the elongation of the gas along the line of sight. These constraints are deprojected thanks to Bayesian inference. The mass distribution is described as a Navarro-Frenk-White halo with arbitrary orientation, gas density and temperature are modelled with parametric profiles. We applied the method to Abell 1689. Independently of the priors, the cluster is massive, M_{200}=(1.3+-0.2)*10^{15}M_sun, and over-concentrated, c_{200}=8+-1, but still consistent with theoretical predictions. The total matter is triaxial (minor to major axis ratio ~0.5+-0.1 exploiting priors from N-body simulations) with the major axis nearly orientated along the line of sight. The gas is rounder (minor to major axis ratio ~0.6+-0.1) and deviates from hydrostatic equilibrium. The contribution of non-thermal pressure is ~20-50 per cent in inner regions, <~ 300 kpc, and ~25+-5 per cent at ~1.5 Mpc.Comment: 14 pages; MNRAS, in pres

    SZ contribution to characterize the shape of galaxy cluster haloes

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    We present the on-going activity to characterize the geometrical properties of the gas and dark matter haloes using multi-wavelength observations of galaxy clusters. The role of the SZ signal in describing the gas distribution is discussed for the pilot case of the CLASH object MACS J1206.2-0847

    miMic: The microphone as a pencil

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    miMic, a sonic analogue of paper and pencil is proposed: An augmented microphone for vocal and gestural sonic sketching. Vocalizations are classified and interpreted as instances of sound models, which the user can play with by vocal and gestural control. The physical device is based on a modified microphone, with embedded inertial sensors and buttons. Sound models can be selected by vocal imitations that are automatically classified, and each model is mapped to vocal and gestural features for real-time control. With miMic, the sound designer can explore a vast sonic space and quickly produce expressive sonic sketches, which may be turned into sound prototypes by further adjustment of model parameters

    Proximity induced topological state in graphene

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    The appearance of topologically protected states at the surface of an ordinary insulator is a rare occurrence and to date only a handful of materials are known for having this property. An intriguing question concerns the possibility of forming topologically protected interfaces between different materials. Here we propose that a topological phase can be transferred to graphene by proximity with the three-dimensional topological insulator Bi2_2Se3_3. By using density functional and transport theory we prove that, at the verge of the chemical bond formation, a hybrid state forms at the graphene/Bi2_2Se3_3 interface. The state has Dirac-cone-like dispersion at the Γ\Gamma point and a well-defined helical spin-texture, indicating its topologically protected nature. This demonstrates that proximity can transfer the topological phase from Bi2_2Se3_3 to graphene.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figure

    The mass-concentration relation in lensing clusters: the role of statistical biases and selection effects

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    The relation between mass and concentration of galaxy clusters traces their formation and evolution. Massive lensing clusters were observed to be over-concentrated and following a steep scaling in tension with predictions from the concordance Λ\LambdaCDM paradigm. We critically revise the relation in the CLASH, the SGAS, the LOCUSS, and the high-redshift samples of weak lensing clusters. Measurements of mass and concentration are anti-correlated, which can bias the observed relation towards steeper values. We corrected for this bias and compared the measured relation to theoretical predictions accounting for halo triaxiality, adiabatic contraction of the halo, presence of a dominant BCG and, mostly, selection effects in the observed sample. The normalisation, the slope and the scatter of the expected relation are strongly sample-dependent. For the considered samples, the predicted slope is much steeper than that of the underlying relation characterising dark-matter only clusters. We found that the correction for statistical and selection biases in observed relations mostly solve the tension with the Λ\LambdaCDM model.Comment: 13 pages, 3 figures; v2: 14 pages, minor changes, in press on MNRA
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