Baryon Content of Massive Galaxy Clusters (0.57 < z < 1.33)
I. Chiu, J. Mohr, M. Mcdonald, S. Bocquet, M. L. Ashby, M. Bayliss, B., A. Benson, L. E. Bleem, M. Brodwin, S. Desai, J. P. Dietrich, W. R. Forman,, C. Gangkofner, A. H. Gonzalez, C. Hennig, J. Liu, C. L. Reichardt, A. Saro,, B. Stalder, S. A. Stanford, J. Song, T. Schrabback

TL;DR
This study measures the distribution of baryonic matter in massive galaxy clusters at high redshift, revealing how stellar and gas components vary with cluster mass and comparing these properties across cosmic time.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of stellar, gas, and baryon fractions in galaxy clusters at z~0.9, and analyzes their dependence on cluster mass and redshift, combining high-redshift data with low-redshift samples.
Findings
BCG mass is 0.12% of halo mass at z=0.9
Cluster stellar mass function characterized by M0=10^11 M_sun
Higher mass clusters have lower stellar and cold baryon fractions
Abstract
We study the stellar, Brightest Cluster Galaxy (BCG) and intracluster medium (ICM) masses of 14 South Pole Telescope (SPT) selected galaxy clusters with median redshift and median mass . We estimate stellar masses for each cluster and BCG using six photometric bands spanning the range from the ultraviolet to the near-infrared observed with the VLT, HST and Spitzer. The ICM masses are derived from Chandra and XMM-Newton X-ray observations, and the virial masses are derived from the SPT Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Effect signature. At the BCG mass constitutes % of the halo mass for a cluster, and this fraction falls as . The cluster stellar mass function has a characteristic mass , and the number of galaxies per unit mass in…
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