Abell 370 revisited: refurbished Hubble imaging of the first strong lensing cluster
Johan Richard (Durham), Jean-Paul Kneib (OAMP), Marceau Limousin, (OAMP, Dark Cosmology Centre), Alastair Edge (Durham), Eric Jullo (JPL)

TL;DR
This paper provides a detailed strong lensing analysis of Abell 370 using new high-resolution multicolor Hubble images, revealing its complex mass distribution and confirming its merging cluster status, which enhances its utility for high-redshift galaxy searches.
Contribution
The study offers a refined mass model of Abell 370 with significantly reduced errors, and demonstrates the importance of multicolor imaging in accurately identifying multiple lensed images.
Findings
Mass within Einstein radius: 2.82±0.15×10^14 M_sun
Mass model error reduced to below 5%
Abell 370 is a merging, bi-modal cluster
Abstract
We present a strong lensing analysis of the galaxy cluster Abell 370 (z=0.375) based on the recent multicolor ACS images obtained as part of the Early Release Observation (ERO) that followed the Hubble Service Mission #4. Back in 1987, the giant gravitational arc (z=0.725) in Abell 370 was one of the first pieces of evidence that massive clusters are dense enough to act as strong gravitational lenses. The new observations reveal in detail its disklike morphology, and we show that it can be interpreted as a complex five-image configuration, with a total magnification factor of 32+/-4. Moreover, the high resolution multicolor information allowed us to identify 10 multiply imaged background galaxies. We derive a mean Einstein radius of RE=39+/-2" for a source redshift at z=2, corresponding to a mass of M(<RE) = 2.82+/-0.15 1e14 Msol and M(<250 kpc)=3.8+/-0.2 1e14 Msol, in good agreement…
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