CLASH-VLT: Testing the Nature of Gravity with Galaxy Cluster Mass Profiles
L. Pizzuti, B. Sartoris, S. Borgani, L. Amendola, K. Umetsu, A., Biviano, M. Girardi, P. Rosati, I. Balestra, G. B. Caminha, B.Frye, A., Koekemoer, C. Grillo, M. Lombardi, A. Mercurio, M. Nonino

TL;DR
This study tests the nature of gravity using galaxy cluster mass profiles by comparing kinematic and lensing data to constrain the ratio of gravitational potentials, providing insights into modified gravity theories.
Contribution
It presents a novel analysis combining high-precision kinematic and lensing measurements of a galaxy cluster to test the ratio of gravitational potentials and constrain modified gravity models.
Findings
Measured the potential ratio η at the cluster's virial radius as approximately 1.01 with uncertainties.
Derived an upper bound on the scalaron interaction length in f(R) gravity models as less than 2 Mpc.
Highlighted the importance of high-quality data and systematic control for testing gravity with galaxy clusters.
Abstract
We use high-precision kinematic and lensing measurements of the total mass profile of the dynamically relaxed galaxy cluster MACS J1206.2-0847 at to estimate the value of the ratio between the two scalar potentials in the linear perturbed Friedmann-Lemaitre-Robertson-Walker metric.[...] Complementary kinematic and lensing mass profiles were derived from exhaustive analyses using the data from the Cluster Lensing And Supernova survey with Hubble (CLASH) and the spectroscopic follow-up with the Very Large Telescope (CLASH-VLT). Whereas the kinematic mass profile tracks only the time-time part of the perturbed metric (i.e. only ), the lensing mass profile reflects the contribution of both time-time and space-space components (i.e. the sum ). We thus express as a function of the mass profiles and perform our analysis over the radial range…
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