IDCS J1426.5+3508: The Most Massive Galaxy Cluster at $z > 1.5$
Mark Brodwin, Michael McDonald, Anthony H. Gonzalez, S. A. Stanford,, Peter R. Eisenhardt, Daniel Stern, Gregory R. Zeimann

TL;DR
This paper reports the discovery and detailed analysis of IDCS J1426.5+3508, the most massive galaxy cluster known at z > 1.5, using multi-wavelength observations to confirm its mass, structure, and evolutionary state.
Contribution
It provides the first comprehensive multi-method mass estimate for a z > 1.5 cluster, confirming its status as the most massive at that redshift and revealing its cool core and merger activity.
Findings
Mass estimates from X-ray, SZ, and lensing are in good agreement.
The cluster has a dense, low-entropy cool core at high redshift.
Upper limit on ICM metallicity suggests ongoing enrichment.
Abstract
We present a deep (100 ks) Chandra observation of IDCS J1426.5+3508, a spectroscopically confirmed, infrared-selected galaxy cluster at . This cluster is the most massive galaxy cluster currently known at , based on existing Sunyaev-Zel'dovich (SZ) and gravitational lensing detections. We confirm this high mass via a variety of X-ray scaling relations, including -M, -M, -M and -M, finding a tight distribution of masses from these different methods, spanning M = 2.3-3.3 M, with the low-scatter -based mass M. IDCS J1426.5+3508 is currently the only cluster at for which X-ray, SZ and gravitational lensing mass estimates exist, and these are in remarkably good agreement. We find a relatively tight distribution of the gas-to-total mass ratio,…
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