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Weak-Lensing Mass Calibration of ACTPol Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Clusters with the Hyper Suprime-Cam Survey

Authors :
Miyatake, Hironao
Battaglia, Nicholas
Hilton, Matt
Medezinski, Elinor
Nishizawa, Atsushi J.
More, Surhud
Aiola, Simone
Bahcall, Neta
Bond, J. Richard
Calabrese, Erminia
Choi, Steve K.
Devlin, Mark J.
Dunkley, Joanna
Dunner, Rolando
Fuzia, Brittany
Gallardo, Patricio
Gralla, Megan
Hasselfield, Matthew
Halpern, Mark
Hikage, Chiaki
Hill, J. Colin
Hincks, Adam D.
Hložek, Renée
Huffenberger, Kevin
Hughes, John P.
Koopman, Brian
Kosowsky, Arthur
Louis, Thibaut
Madhavacheril, Mathew S.
McMahon, Jeff
Mandelbaum, Rachel
Marriage, Tobias A.
Maurin, Loïc
Miyazaki, Satoshi
Moodley, Kavilan
Murata, Ryoma
Naess, Sigurd
Newburgh, Laura
Niemack, Michael D.
Nishimichi, Takahiro
Okabe, Nobuhiro
Oguri, Masamune
Osato, Ken
Page, Lyman
Partridge, Bruce
Robertson, Naomi
Sehgal, Neelima
Shirasaki, Masato
Sievers, Jonathan
Sifón, Cristóbal
Simon, Sara
Sherwin, Blake
Spergel, David N.
Staggs, Suzanne T.
Stein, George
Takada, Masahiro
Trac, Hy
Umetsu, Keiichi
van Engelen, Alex
Wollack, Edward J.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

We present weak-lensing measurements using the first-year data from the Hyper Suprime-Cam Strategic Survey Program on the Subaru telescope for eight galaxy clusters selected through their thermal Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) signal measured at 148 GHz with the Atacama Cosmology Telescope Polarimeter experiment. The overlap between the two surveys in this work is 33.8 square degrees, before masking bright stars. The signal-to-noise ratio of individual cluster lensing measurements ranges from 2.2 to 8.7, with a total of 11.1 for the stacked cluster weak-lensing signal. We fit for an average weak-lensing mass distribution using three different profiles, a Navarro-Frenk-White profile, a dark-matter-only emulated profile, and a full cosmological hydrodynamic emulated profile. We interpret the differences among the masses inferred by these models as a systematic error of 10\%, which is currently smaller than the statistical error. We obtain the ratio of the SZ-estimated mass to the lensing-estimated mass (the so-called hydrostatic mass bias $1-b$) of $0.74^{+0.13}_{-0.12}$, which is comparable to previous SZ-selected clusters from the Atacama Cosmology Telescope and from the {\sl Planck} Satellite. We conclude with a discussion of the implications for cosmological parameters inferred from cluster abundances compared to cosmic microwave background primary anisotropy measurements.<br />Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures, 2 tables, comments are welcome

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.1804.05873
Document Type :
Working Paper
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab0af0