Abstract

In this paper, we present a new method to select the faint, background galaxies used to derive the mass of galaxy clusters by weak lensing. The method is based on the simultaneous analysis of the shear signal, that should be consistent with zero for the foreground, unlensed galaxies, and of the colors of the galaxies: photometric data from the COSMic evOlution Survey are used to train the color selection. In order to validate this methodology, we test it against a set of state-of-the-art image simulations of mock galaxy clusters in different redshift [$0.23-0.45$] and mass [$0.5-1.55\times10^{15}M_\odot$] ranges, mimicking medium-deep multicolor imaging observations (e.g. SUBARU, LBT). The performance of our method in terms of contamination by unlensed sources is comparable to a selection based on photometric redshifts, which however requires a good spectral coverage and is thus much more observationally demanding. The application of our method to simulations gives an average ratio between estimated and true masses of $\sim 0.98 \pm 0.09$. As a further test, we finally apply our method to real data, and compare our results with other weak lensing mass estimates in the literature: for this purpose we choose the cluster Abell 2219 ($z=0.228$), for which multi-band (BVRi) data are publicly available.

Highlights

  • Being the largest gravitationally bound structures in the Universe, galaxy clusters are the most powerful gravitational lenses on the sky

  • Dilution of the lensing signal due to unlensed sources can crucially affect the estimation of the cluster mass

  • We developed a new selection method for the background lensed sources based on the simultaneous analysis of the shear signal and of the colours of the galaxies, with the photometry from the COSMic evOlution Survey (COSMOS) used as training set

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Being the largest gravitationally bound structures in the Universe, galaxy clusters are the most powerful gravitational lenses on the sky. While strong lensing events such as multiple images of distant galaxies and gravitational arcs occur in the cluster cores, at larger radii lensing by clusters appears in the so-called weak-lensing regime In this case, the lensing induced distortions of the galaxy shapes are tiny and the lensing signal is detectable only by averaging over ensembles of a sufficient number of lensed galaxies. While testing the performance of the selection method, we process the simulated data as done for real observations, including the process of measuring the shear from the galaxy images. This serves as a further validation test for the weak-lensing analysis pipeline that we recently used in Radovich et al (2015).

LENSING SIMULATIONS
SHEAR MEASUREMENTS
SELECTION OF THE BACKGROUND SAMPLE
ANALYSIS OF SIMULATED DATA
Contamination
Comparison to other selection methods
Mass estimates
ABELL 2219
Effects of mis-centring
General properties
Previous weak-lensing analyses
Image reduction
B V R SDSS i
Shape measurement
Selection of the background galaxies
Mass estimate
Findings
CONCLUSION
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