Measuring the escape velocity and mass profiles of galaxy clusters beyond their virial radius
Ana Laura Serra, Antonaldo Diaferio, Giuseppe Murante, Stefano, Borgani

TL;DR
This paper evaluates the caustic technique for measuring galaxy cluster mass and escape velocity profiles beyond the virial radius, demonstrating its accuracy and limitations through simulations.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of the caustic technique's systematic errors and validates its effectiveness in recovering cluster profiles beyond the virial radius.
Findings
Achieves better than 10% accuracy in escape velocity profiles up to 4 r_200
Mass profiles are accurately recovered between 0.6 and 4 r_200
Uncertainties are reduced when stacking clusters for average profiles
Abstract
The caustic technique uses galaxy redshifts alone to measure the escape velocity and mass profiles of galaxy clusters to clustrocentric distances well beyond the virial radius, where dynamical equilibrium does not necessarily hold. We provide a detailed description of this technique and analyse its possible systematic errors. We apply the caustic technique to clusters with mass M_200>=10^{14}h^{-1} M_sun extracted from a cosmological hydrodynamic simulation of a LambdaCDM universe. With a few tens of redshifts per squared comoving megaparsec within the cluster, the caustic technique, on average, recovers the profile of the escape velocity from the cluster with better than 10 percent accuracy up to r~4 r_200. The caustic technique also recovers the mass profile with better than 10 percent accuracy in the range (0.6-4) r_200, but it overestimates the mass up to 70 percent at smaller…
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