Discovery and Cosmological Implications of SPT-CL J2106-5844, the Most Massive Known Cluster at z > 1
R. J. Foley, K. Andersson, G. Bazin, T. de Haan, J. Ruel, P. A. R., Ade, K. A. Aird, R. Armstrong, M. L. N. Ashby, M. Bautz, B. A. Benson, L. E., Bleem, M. Bonamente, M. Brodwin, J. E. Carlstrom, C. L. Chang, A., Clocchiatti, T. M. Crawford, A. T. Crites, S. Desai, M. A. Dobbs

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of the most massive galaxy cluster at redshift greater than 1, using the South Pole Telescope, and discusses its implications for galaxy formation, evolution, and cosmology.
Contribution
The paper presents the discovery and detailed characterization of SPT-CL J2106-5844, the most massive known cluster at z > 1, and explores its significance for cosmological models.
Findings
Massive galaxy cluster at z=1.132 discovered
Cluster's mass estimated at ~1.27 x 10^15 solar masses
Only a 7% chance of such a cluster existing in the survey area
Abstract
Using the South Pole Telescope (SPT), we have discovered the most massive known galaxy cluster at z > 1, SPT-CL J2106-5844. In addition to producing a strong Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect signal, this system is a luminous X-ray source and its numerous constituent galaxies display spatial and color clustering, all indicating the presence of a massive galaxy cluster. VLT and Magellan spectroscopy of 18 member galaxies shows that the cluster is at z = 1.132^+0.002_-0.003. Chandra observations obtained through a combined HRC-ACIS GTO program reveal an X-ray spectrum with an Fe K line redshifted by z = 1.18 +/- 0.03. These redshifts are consistent with galaxy colors in extensive optical, near-infrared, and mid-infrared imaging. SPT-CL J2106-5844 displays extreme X-ray properties for a cluster, having a core-excluded temperature of kT = 11.0^+2.6_-1.9 keV and a luminosity (within r_500) of L_X…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
