870 research outputs found
Making the observational parsimonious richness a working mass proxy
Richness, i.e., the number of bright cluster galaxies, is known to correlate
with the cluster mass, however, to exploit it as mass proxy we need a way to
estimate the aperture in which galaxies should be counted that minimizes the
scatter between mass and richness. In this work, using a sample of 39 clusters
with accurate caustic masses at 0.1<z<0.22, we first show that the scatter
between mass and richness derived from survey data is negligibly small, as
small as best mass proxies. The scatter turns out to be smaller than in some
previous works and has a 90% upper limit of 0.05 dex in mass. The current
sample, adjoining 76 additional clusters analyzed in previous works,
establishes an almost scatterless, minimally evolving (if at all),
mass-richness scaling in the redshift range 0.03<z<0.55. We then exploit this
negligible scatter to derive the reference aperture to be used to compute
richness and to predict the mass of cluster samples. These predicted masses
have a total 0.16 dex scatter with caustic mass, about half of which is not
intrinsic to the proxy, but related to the noisiness of the caustic masses used
for test proxy performances. These results make richness-based masses of best
quality and available for large samples at a low observational cost.Comment: A&A, in pres
The buildup of stellar mass and the 3.6 micron luminosity function in clusters from z=1.25 to z=0.2
We have measured the 3.6 micron luminosity evolution of about 1000 galaxies
in 32 clusters at 0.2<z<1.25, without any a priori assumption about luminosity
evolution, i.e. in a logically rigorous way. We find that the luminosity of our
galaxies evolves as an old and passively evolving population formed at high
redshift without any need for additional redshift-dependent evolution. Models
with a prolonged stellar mass growth are rejected by the data with high
confidence. The data also reject models in which the age of the stars is the
same at all redshifts. Similarly, the characteristic stellar mass evolves, in
the last two thirds of the universe age, as expected for a stellar population
formed at high redshift. Together with the old age of stellar populations
derived from fundamental plane studies, our data seems to suggest that
early-type cluster galaxies have been completely assembled at high redshift,
and not only that their stars are old. The quality of the data allows us to
derive the LF and mass evolution homogeneously over the whole redshift range,
using a single estimator. The Schechter function describes the galaxy
luminosity function well. The characteristic luminosity at z=0.5 is is found to
be 16.30 mag, with an uncertainty of 10 per cent.Comment: appeared on A&A (A&A 448, 447
Relative distribution of dark matter and stellar mass in three massive galaxy clusters
This work observationally addresses the relative distribution of total and
optically luminous matter in galaxy clusters by computing the radial profile of
the stellar-to-total mass ratio. We adopt state-of-the-art accurate lensing
masses free from assumptions about the mass radial profile and we use extremely
deep multicolor wide--field optical images to distinguish star formation from
stellar mass, to properly calculate the mass in galaxies of low mass, those
outside the red sequence, and to allow a contribution from galaxies of low mass
that is clustercentric dependent. We pay special attention to issues and
contributions that are usually underrated, yet are major sources of
uncertainty, and we present an approach that allows us to account for all of
them. Here we present the results for three very massive clusters at
, MACSJ1206.2-0847, MACSJ0329.6-0211, and RXJ1347.5-1145. We find
that stellar mass and total matter are closely distributed on scales from about
150 kpc to 2.5 Mpc: the stellar-to-total mass ratio is radially constant. We
find that the characteristic mass stays constant across clustercentric radii
and clusters, but that the less-massive end of the galaxy mass function is
dependent on the environment.Comment: A&A, in pres
A low-scatter survey-based mass proxy for clusters of galaxies
Estimates of cosmological parameters using galaxy clusters have the scatter
in the observable at a given mass as a fundamental parameter. This work
computes the amplitude of the scatter for a newly introduced mass proxy, the
product of the cluster total luminosity times the mass-to-light ratio, usually
referred as stellar mass. The analysis of 12 galaxy clusters with excellent
total masses shows a tight correlation between the stellar mass, or stellar
fraction, and total mass within r500 with negligible intrinsic scatter: the 90%
upper limit is 0.06 dex, the posterior mean is 0.027 dex. This scatter is
similar to the one of best-determined mass proxies, such as Yx, i.e. the
product of X-ray temperature and gas mass. The size of the cluster sample used
to determine the intrinsic scatter is small, as in previous works proposing
low-scatter proxies because very accurate masses are needed to infer very small
values of intrinsic scatter. Three-quarters of the studied clusters have lgM
<~14 Msol, which is advantageous from a cosmological perspective because these
clusters are far more abundant than more massive clusters. At the difference of
other mass proxies such as Yx, stellar mass can be determined with survey data
up to at least z=0.9 using upcoming optical near-infrared surveys, such as DES
and Euclid, or even with currently available surveys, covering however smaller
solid angles. On the other end, the uncertainty about the predicted mass of a
single cluster is large, 0.21 to 0.32 dex, depending on cluster richness. This
is largely because the proxy itself has ~0.10 dex errors for clusters of lgM<~
14 Msol mass.Comment: A&A in pres
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