IDCS J1426.5+3508: Cosmological implications of a massive, strong lensing cluster at Z = 1.75
Anthony H. Gonzalez, S. A. Stanford, Mark Brodwin, Cosimo Fedeli,, Arjun Dey, Peter R. M. Eisenhardt, Conor Mancone, Daniel Stern, Greg Zeimann

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery of a massive, strongly lensing galaxy cluster at redshift 1.75, examines its cosmological implications, and discusses the discrepancy with standard LCDM predictions regarding giant arc occurrences.
Contribution
It presents the first strong lensing observation of a galaxy cluster at z > 1.4 and analyzes its implications for cosmological models and structure formation theories.
Findings
The cluster's lensing mass aligns with the brightest galaxy.
The observed giant arc challenges LCDM predictions.
The existence of such a cluster and arc is unlikely under standard models.
Abstract
The galaxy cluster IDCS J1426.5+3508 at z = 1.75 is the most massive galaxy cluster yet discovered at z > 1.4 and the first cluster at this epoch for which the Sunyaev-Zel'Dovich effect has been observed. In this paper we report on the discovery with HST imaging of a giant arc associated with this cluster. The curvature of the arc suggests that the lensing mass is nearly coincident with the brightest cluster galaxy, and the color is consistent with the arc being a star-forming galaxy. We compare the constraint on M200 based upon strong lensing with Sunyaev-Zel'Dovich results, finding that the two are consistent if the redshift of the arc is z > 3. Finally, we explore the cosmological implications of this system, considering the likelihood of the existence of a strongly lensing galaxy cluster at this epoch in an LCDM universe. While the existence of the cluster itself can potentially be…
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