PLCK G165.7+67.0: A New Massive Lensing Cluster Discovered in an HST Census of Sub-Millimeter Giant Arcs Selected Using Planck/Herschel [GA]

http://arxiv.org/abs/1805.04790


We obtained new HST WFC3-NIR imaging in the fields of six strongly-lensed Dusty Star Forming Galaxies (DSFGs) at z=2-4 identified by color and compactness through a new method of discovering massive lensing clusters using Planck/Herschel. We identify the near infrared counterparts of the sub-millimeter sources and undertake a strong lensing analysis for all six fields. One field in particular, PLCK G165.7+67.0 (G165) at z=0.351, stands out for its exceptional lensing properties. On combining the color and morphological information, we find eleven cases of a galaxy in the background that appears in multiple locations in the image plane. The red and spatially-extended lensed DSFG in G165 bisects the critical curve, incurring a high magnification factor of >/=30 and producing a counter-image that is detected in our new longer wavelength ground- and space-based imaging data. On undertaking a spectroscopic redshift census from ground-based observatories, we calculate a dynamical mass from 17 cluster members of 8.8 +/- 2.3 \times 10^14 Msun that is a factor of ~3 higher than the lensing mass within ~250 kpc. A velocity gradient is seen across the bimodal mass structure. If real, the dynamical mass may be inflated owing to a non-spherical arrangement of mass. Taken altogether, we suggest that this cluster with its high dark matter concentration, relatively weak X-ray flux and low SZ decrement may potentially be explained as a pre-merger for which the intra-cluster gas is diluted while the surface mass densities integrated along the line-of-sight remains supercritical to strong lensing effects.

Read this paper on arXiv…

B. Frye, M. Pascale, A. Zitrin, et. al.
Tue, 15 May 18
34/87

Comments: Submitted to ApJ; 28 pages including 13 figures and 4 tables