#followup #friday! 🤩 Delighted to see a new study on Hamilton's Object!
https://arxiv.org/abs/2404.11659
Our merger hypothesis based on ONE multiple-image system and a RedMapper galaxy cluster centre is confirmed! And our analysis remains valid despite updates: 🧶🧶

#cosmology #GravitationalLens #DarkMatter #science

Beyond MACS: Physical properties of extremely X-ray luminous clusters at $z > 0.5$

We present a sample of over 100 highly X-ray luminous galaxy clusters at $z\sim$ 0.5-0.9, discovered by the extended Massive Cluster Survey (eMACS) in ROSAT All-Sky Survey (RASS) data. Follow-up observations of a subset at higher resolution and greater depth with the Chandra X-ray Observatory are used to map the gaseous intra-cluster medium, while strong-gravitational-lensing features identified in Hubble Space Telescope imaging allow us to constrain the total mass distribution. We present evidence of the exceptional gravitational-lensing power of these massive systems, search for substructure along the line of sight by mapping the radial velocities of cluster members obtained through extensive ground-based spectroscopy, and identify dramatic cases of galaxy evolution in high-density cluster environments. The available observations of the eMACS sample presented here provide a wealth of insights into the properties of very massive clusters ($\gtrsim 10^{15} M_\odot$) at $z > 0.5$, which act as powerful lenses to study galaxies in the very distant Universe. We also discuss the evolutionary state, galaxy population, and large-scale environment of eMACS clusters and release to the community all data and science products to further the understanding of the first generation of truly massive clusters to have formed in the Universe.

arXiv.org
Updates compared to https://arxiv.org/abs/2105.04562 and https://arxiv.org/abs/2207.01630:
a) cluster redshift z=0.526 -> two clumps around z=0.595 and z=0.625
b) source redshift z=0.82 -> z=3.375
c) additional multiple image system at z=5.166
Hamilton's Object -- a clumpy galaxy straddling the gravitational caustic of a galaxy cluster : Constraints on dark matter clumping

We report the discovery of a 'folded' gravitationally lensed image, 'Hamilton's Object', found in a HST image of the field near the AGN SDSS J223010.47-081017.8 ($z=0.62$). The lensed images are sourced by a galaxy at a spectroscopic redshift of 0.8200$\pm0.0005$ and form a fold configuration on a caustic caused by a foreground galaxy cluster at a photometric redshift of 0.526$\pm0.018$ seen in the corresponding Pan-STARRS PS1 image and marginally detected as a faint ROSAT All-Sky Survey X-ray source. The lensed images exhibit properties similar to those of other folds where the source galaxy falls very close to or straddles the caustic of a galaxy cluster. The folded images are stretched in a direction roughly orthogonal to the critical curve, but the configuration is that of a tangential cusp. Guided by morphological features, published simulations and similar fold observations in the literature, we identify a third or counter-image, confirmed by spectroscopy. Because the fold-configuration shows highly distinctive surface brightness features, follow-up observations of microlensing or detailed investigations of the individual surface brightness features at higher resolution can further shed light on kpc-scale dark matter properties. We determine the local lens properties at the positions of the multiple images according to the observation-based lens reconstruction of Wagner et al. (2019). The analysis is in accordance with a mass density which hardly varies on an arc-second scale (6 kpc) over the areas covered by the multiple images.

arXiv.org

Yet, contrary to footnote 13, our local lens props remain invariant bc lens-model-indep. methods can't use redshift info due to the deg. betw. cosmology+lensing and lensing=effective 2d mass from all matter along the line of sight betw. source and obs.

https://youtu.be/T7p12s2H5v0?si=0DhqTTL32i8K_hed

Besides that, this cluster is the first, where we can constrain the smoothness of #DarkMatter without any model directly from the data!

#cosmology #GravitationalLens #science

Jenny Wagner | As Good as It Gets – Towards the Best-Understood H0 from Strong Lensing

YouTube