Gravitational lensing detection of an extremely dense environment around a galaxy cluster [CEA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1807.04277


Galaxy clusters form at the highest density nodes of the cosmic web. The clustering of massive halos is enhanced relative to the general mass distribution and matter beyond the virial region is strongly correlated to the halo mass (halo bias). Clustering can be further enhanced depending on halo properties other than mass (secondary bias). The questions of how much and why the regions surrounding rich clusters are over-dense are still unanswered. Here, we report the analysis of the environment bias in a sample of very massive clusters, selected through the Sunyaev-Zel’dovich effect by the Planck mission. We present the first detection of the correlated dark matter associated to a single cluster, PSZ2 G099.86+58.45. The system is extremely rare in the current paradigm of structure formation. The gravitational lensing signal was traced up to 30 megaparsecs with high signal-to-noise ratio ~3.4. The measured shear is very large and points at environment matter density in notable excess of the cosmological mean. The boosting of the correlated dark matter density around high mass halos can be very effective. Together with ensemble studies of the large scale structure, lensing surveys can picture the surroundings of single haloes.

Read this paper on arXiv…

M. Sereno, C. Giocoli, L. Izzo, et. al.
Fri, 13 Jul 18
39/76

Comments: 9 pages. Preliminary, unedited version of the letter published on Nature Astronomy on 9 July 2018, see this https URL