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RELICS: Strong-lensing analysis of the massive clusters MACS J0308.9+2645 and PLCK G171.9-40.7

Authors :
Acebron, Ana
Cibirka, Nathália
Zitrin, Adi
Coe, Dan
Agulli, Irene
Sharon, Keren
Bradač, Maruša
Frye, Brenda
Livermore, Rachael C.
Mahler, Guillaume
Salmon, Brett
Umetsu, Keiichi
Bradley, Larry
Andrade-Santos, Felipe
Avila, Roberto
Carrasco, Daniela
Cerny, Catherine
Czakon, Nicole G.
Dawson, William A.
Hoag, Austin T.
Huang, Kuang-Han
Johnson, Traci L.
Jones, Christine
Kikuchihara, Shotaro
Lam, Daniel
Lovisari, Lorenzo
Mainali, Ramesh
Oesch, Pascal A.
Ogaz, Sara
Ouchi, Masami
Past, Matthew
Paterno-Mahler, Rachel
Peterson, Avery
Ryan, Russell E.
Sendra-Server, Irene
Stark, Daniel P.
Strait, Victoria
Toft, Sune
Trenti, Michele
Vulcani, Benedetta
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Strong gravitational lensing by galaxy clusters has become a powerful tool for probing the high-redshift Universe, magnifying distant and faint background galaxies. Reliable strong lensing (SL) models are crucial for determining the intrinsic properties of distant, magnified sources and for constructing their luminosity function. We present here the first SL analysis of MACS J0308.9+2645 and PLCK G171.9-40.7, two massive galaxy clusters imaged with the Hubble Space Telescope in the framework of the Reionization Lensing Cluster Survey (RELICS). We use the Light-Traces-Mass modeling technique to uncover sets of multiply imaged galaxies and constrain the mass distribution of the clusters. Our SL analysis reveals that both clusters have particularly large Einstein radii ($\theta_E>30"$ for a source redshift of $z_s=2$), providing fairly large areas with high magnifications, useful for high-redshift galaxy searches ($\sim2$ arcmin$^{2}$ with $\mu>5$ to $\sim1$ arcmin$^{2}$ with $\mu>10$, similar to a typical \textit{Hubble Frontier Fields} cluster). We also find that MACS J0308.9+2645 hosts a promising, apparently bright (J$\sim23.2-24.6$ AB), multiply imaged high-redshift candidate at $z\sim6.4$. These images are amongst the brightest high-redshift candidates found in RELICS. Our mass models, including magnification maps, are made publicly available for the community through the Mikulski Archive for Space Telescopes.<br />Comment: 14 pages, 6 figures, 4 tables, accepted for publication in ApJ

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1803.00560
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/aabe29