Hubble Space Telescope Weak-lensing Study of the Galaxy Cluster XMMU J2235.3-2557 at z=1.4: A Surprisingly Massive Galaxy Cluster when the Universe is One-third of its Current Age
M. J. Jee (UCD), P. Rosati (ESO), H. C. Ford (JHU), K. S. Dawson, (UoU), C. Lidman (ESO), S. Perlmutter (LBL), R. Demarco (UdeC), V. Strazzullo, (NRAO), C. Mullis (Wachovia), H. B\"ohringer (MPI), and R. Fassbender (MPI)

TL;DR
This study uses weak-lensing analysis of the high-redshift galaxy cluster XMMU J2235.3-2557 at z=1.4, revealing it to be unexpectedly massive, challenging current cosmological models of cluster formation.
Contribution
First weak-lensing measurement of a z=1.4 galaxy cluster demonstrating its high mass and rarity, providing new insights into early universe structure formation.
Findings
Detected a strong lensing signal at >8 sigma level.
Estimated cluster mass within 1 Mpc as (8.5±1.7) x 10^14 solar masses.
Found the cluster's high mass is inconsistent with standard cosmological expectations.
Abstract
We present a weak-lensing analysis of the z=1.4 galaxy cluster XMMU J2235.3-2557, based on deep Advanced Camera for Surveys images. Despite the observational challenge set by the high redshift of the lens, we detect a substantial lensing signal at the >~ 8 sigma level. This clear detection is enabled in part by the high mass of the cluster, which is verified by our both parametric and non-parametric estimation of the cluster mass. Assuming that the cluster follows a Navarro-Frenk-White mass profile, we estimate that the projected mass of the cluster within r=1 Mpc is (8.5+-1.7) x 10^14 solar mass, where the error bar includes the statistical uncertainty of the shear profile, the effect of possible interloping background structures, the scatter in concentration parameter, and the error in our estimation of the mean redshift of the background galaxies. The high X-ray temperature…
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