Weighing the Giants IV: Cosmology and Neutrino Mass
Adam B. Mantz (1), Anja von der Linden (2,3), Steven W. Allen (2),, Douglas E. Applegate (4), Patrick L. Kelly (5), R. Glenn Morris (2), David A., Rapetti (3), Robert W. Schmidt (6), Saroj Adhikari (7), Mark T. Allen (2),, Patricia R. Burchat (2), David L. Burke (2)

TL;DR
This paper uses weak gravitational lensing of galaxy clusters to refine cosmological parameters, achieving improved precision and confirming minimal neutrino mass within a flat ΛCDM model, while also constraining dark energy and gravity models.
Contribution
It provides the first robust weak lensing calibration of cluster masses at 8% accuracy, significantly improving cosmological constraints and neutrino mass limits compared to previous studies.
Findings
Achieved 8% mass calibration accuracy for galaxy clusters.
Constrained $\sigma_8(\Omega_m/0.3)^{0.17}$ to 0.81±0.03.
Found no evidence for non-minimal neutrino mass.
Abstract
We employ robust weak gravitational lensing measurements to improve cosmological constraints from measurements of the galaxy cluster mass function and its evolution, using X-ray selected clusters detected in the ROSAT All-Sky Survey. Our lensing analysis constrains the absolute mass scale of such clusters at the 8 per cent level, including both statistical and systematic uncertainties. Combining it with the survey data and X-ray follow-up observations, we find a tight constraint on a combination of the mean matter density and late-time normalization of the matter power spectrum, , with marginalized, one-dimensional constraints of and . For these two parameters, this represents a factor of two improvement in precision with respect to previous work, primarily due to the reduced systematic uncertainty…
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