118 research outputs found
X-ray observations and mass determinations in the cluster of galaxies Cl0024+17
We present a detailed analysis of the mass distribution in the rich and
distant cluster of galaxies Cl0024+17. X-ray data come from both a deep
ROSAT/HRI image of the field (Bohringer et al. 1999) and ASCA spectral data.
Using a wide field CCD image of the cluster, we optically identify all the
faint X-ray sources, whose counts are compatible with deep X-ray number counts.
In addition we marginally detect the X-ray counter-part of the gravitational
shear perturbation detected by Bonnet et al. (1994) at a 2.5 level. A
careful spectral analysis of ASCA data is also presented. In particular, we
extract a low resolution spectrum of the cluster free from the contamination by
a nearby point source located 1.2 arcmin from the center. The X-ray temperature
deduced from this analysis is keV at the 90%
confidence level. The comparison between the mass derived from a standard X-ray
analysis and from other methods such as the Virial Theorem or the gravitational
lensing effect lead to a mass discrepancy of a factor 1.5 to 3. We discuss all
the possible sources of uncertainties in each method of mass determination and
give some indications on the way to reduce them. A complementary study of
optical data is in progress and may solve the X-ray/optical discrepancy through
a better understanding of the dynamics of the cluster.Comment: Revised version, accepted in Astronomy and Astrophysics (Main
Journal). Few changes in the discussio
The Rate of Type Ia Supernovae at High Redshift
We derive the rates of Type Ia supernovae (SNIa) over a wide range of
redshifts using a complete sample from the IfA Deep Survey. This sample of more
than 100 SNIa is the largest set ever collected from a single survey, and
therefore uniquely powerful for a detailed supernova rate (SNR) calculation.
Measurements of the SNR as a function of cosmological time offer a glimpse into
the relationship between the star formation rate (SFR) and Type Ia SNR, and may
provide evidence for the progenitor pathway. We observe a progressively
increasing Type Ia SNR between redshifts z~0.3-0.8. The Type Ia SNR
measurements are consistent with a short time delay (t~1 Gyr) with respect to
the SFR, indicating a fairly prompt evolution of SNIa progenitor systems. We
derive a best-fit value of SFR/SNR 580 h_70^(-2) M_solar/SNIa for the
conversion factor between star formation and SNIa rates, as determined for a
delay time of t~1 Gyr between the SFR and the Type Ia SNR. More complete
measurements of the Type Ia SNR at z>1 are necessary to conclusively determine
the SFR--SNR relationship and constrain SNIa evolutionary pathways.Comment: 37 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in Astrophysical
Journal. Figures 7-9 correcte
Exact gravitational lensing and rotation curve
Based on the geodesic equation in a static spherically symmetric metric we
discuss the rotation curve and gravitational lensing. The rotation curve
determines one function in the metric without assuming Einstein's equations.
Then lensing is considered in the weak field approximation of general
relativity. From the null geodesics we derive the lensing equation and
corrections to it.Comment: 12 pages, 1 figur
The X-shooter Lens Survey - II. Sample presentation and spatially resolved kinematics
We present the X-shooter Lens Survey (XLENS) data. The main goal of XLENS is
to disentangle the stellar and dark matter content of massive early-type
galaxies (ETGs), through combined strong gravitational lensing, dynamics and
spectroscopic stellar population studies. The sample consists of 11 lens
galaxies covering the redshift range from to and having stellar
velocity dispersions between and . All
galaxies have multi-band, high-quality HST imaging. We have obtained long-slit
spectra of the lens galaxies with X-shooter on the VLT. We are able to
disentangle the dark and luminous mass components by combining lensing and
extended kinematics data-sets, and we are also able to precisely constrain
stellar mass-to-light ratios and infer the value of the low-mass cut-off of the
IMF, by adding spectroscopic stellar population information. Our goal is to
correlate these IMF parameters with ETG masses and investigate the relation
between baryonic and non-baryonic matter during the mass assembly and structure
formation processes. In this paper we provide an overview of the survey,
highlighting its scientific motivations, main goals and techniques. We present
the current sample, briefly describing the data reduction and analysis process,
and we present the first results on spatially resolved kinematics.Comment: Accepted for publication in MNRA
A wide-field spectroscopic survey of the cluster of galaxies Cl0024+1654. II. A high-speed collision?
The mass distribution of the rich cluster of galaxies Cl0024+1654 has
frequently been used to constrain the nature of dark matter yet a model
consistent with all the observational data has been difficult to construct. In
this paper we analyse the three-dimensional structure of this cluster using new
spectroscopic information on ~300 galaxies within a projected radius of 3
Mpc/h. These data reveal an unusual foreground component of galaxies separated
from the main cluster by 3000 km/s. We use numerical simulations to show that a
high speed collision along the line of sight between Cl0024+1654 and a second
cluster of slightly smaller mass can reproduce the observed peculiar redshift
distribution. The collision dramatically alters the internal mass distribution
of the bound remnants, creating constant density cores from initially cuspy
dark matter profiles and scattering galaxies to large projected radii. Our
results can reconcile the inferred mass profile from gravitational lensing with
predictions from hierarchical structure formation models, while at the same
time resolving the mass discrepancy that results from a comparison between
lensing, velocity dispersion and X-ray studies.Comment: 11 pages, 9 Postscript figures, 1 Jpeg; replaced with clearer, more
concise and accepted version, 13 Feb. 200
GaBoDS: The Garching-Bonn Deep Survey - III. Lyman-Break Galaxies in the Chandra Deep Field South
We present first results of our search for high-redshift galaxies in deep CCD
mosaic images. As a pilot study for a larger survey, very deep images of the
Chandra Deep Field South (CDFS), taken withWFI@MPG/ESO2.2m, are used to select
large samples of 1070 U-band and 565 B-band dropouts with the Lyman-break
method. The data of these Lyman-break galaxies are made public as an electronic
table. These objects are good candidates for galaxies at z~3 and z~4 which is
supported by their photometric redshifts. The distributions of apparent
magnitudes and the clustering properties of the two populations are analysed,
and they show good agreement to earlier studies. We see no evolution in the
comoving clustering scale length from z~3 to z~4. The techniques presented here
will be applied to a much larger sample of U-dropouts from the whole survey in
near future.Comment: 11 pages, 11 figures, replaced with version accepted by A&A. Minor
changes and tabular appendix with LBG catalogues. Version with full
resolution figures available at
http://www.astro.uni-bonn.de/~hendrik/2544.pd
A CFH12k lensing survey of X-ray luminous galaxy clusters II : weak lensing analysis and global correlations
Aims: We present a wide-field multi-color survey of a homogeneous sample of eleven clusters of galaxies for which we measure total masses and mass distributions from weak lensing. This sample, spanning a small range in both X-ray luminosity and redshift, is ideally suited to determining the normalisation of scaling relations between X-ray properties of clusters and their masses (the M-TX and the M-LX relations) and also estimating the scatter in these relations at a fixed luminosity. Methods: The eleven clusters in our sample are all X-ray luminous and span a narrow redshift range at z = 0.21 ± 0.04. The weak lensing analysis of the sample is based on ground-based wide-field imaging obtained with the CFH12k camera on CFHT. We use the methodology developed and applied previously on the massive cluster Abell 1689. A Bayesian method, implemented in the Im2shape software, is used to fit the shape parameters of the faint background galaxies and to correct for PSF smearing. A multi-color selection of the background galaxies is applied to retrieve the weak lensing signal, resulting in a background density of sources of ~10 galaxies per square arc minute. With the present data, shear profiles are measured in all clusters out to at least 2 Mpc (more than 15ÂŽ from the center) with high confidence. The radial shear profiles are fitted with different parametric mass profiles and the virial mass M200 is estimated for each cluster and then compared to other physical properties. Results: Scaling relations between mass and optical luminosity indicate an increase of the M/L ratio with luminosity (M/L â L0.8) and a LX-M200 relation scaling as LX â M2000.83 ± 0.11 while the normalization of the M200 â TX3/2 relation is close to the one expected from hydrodynamical simulations of cluster formation as well as previous X-ray analyses. We suggest that the dispersion in the M200-TX and M200-LX relations reflects the different merging and dynamical histories for clusters of similar X-ray luminosities and intrinsic variations in their measured masses. Improved statistics of clusters over a wider mass range are required for a better control of the intrinsic scatter in scaling relations
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