Prospects for high-z cluster detections with Planck, based on a follow-up of 28 candidates using MegaCam@CFHT
R.F.J. van der Burg, H. Aussel, G.W. Pratt, M. Arnaud, J.-B. Melin, N., Aghanim, R. Barrena, H. Dahle, M. Douspis, A. Ferragamo, S. Fromenteau, R., Herbonnet, G. Hurier, E. Pointecouteau, J.A. Rubino-Martin, A. Streblyanska

TL;DR
This study follows up on Planck SZ cluster candidates using MegaCam@CFHT imaging to confirm optical counterparts, estimate redshifts up to z~0.8, and assess their mass-richness relation, enhancing cluster detection reliability.
Contribution
It introduces a method combining WISE and SDSS/DSS data with MegaCam imaging to confirm and characterize low-significance Planck SZ candidates at high redshift.
Findings
16 of 28 candidates have likely optical counterparts.
13 candidates are at redshift z>0.5, 6 at z>0.7.
Richnesses are consistent with mass estimates after bias correction.
Abstract
The Planck catalogue of SZ sources limits itself to a significance threshold of 4.5 to ensure a low contamination rate by false cluster candidates. This means that only the most massive clusters at redshift z>0.5, and in particular z>0.7, are expected to enter into the catalogue, with a large number of systems in that redshift regime being expected around and just below that threshold. In this paper, we follow-up a sample of SZ sources from the Planck SZ catalogues from 2013 and 2015. In the latter maps, we consider detections around and at lower significance than the threshold adopted by the Planck Collaboration. To keep the contamination rate low, our 28 candidates are chosen to have significant WISE detections, in combination with non-detections in SDSS/DSS, which effectively selects galaxy cluster candidates at redshifts . By taking r- and z-band imaging with…
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