Galaxy Populations in the 26 most massive Galaxy Clusters in the South Pole Telescope SZE Survey
A. Zenteno, J. J. Mohr, S. Desai, B. Stalder, A. Saro, J. P. Dietrich,, M. Bayliss, S. Bocquet, I. Chiu, A. H. Gonzalez, C. Gangkofner, N. Gupta, J., Hlavacek-Larrondo, M. McDonald, C. Reichardt, and A. Rest

TL;DR
This study analyzes the optical properties of the 26 most massive galaxy clusters from the SPT-SZ survey, examining their galaxy profiles, luminosity functions, and halo occupation, revealing evolutionary trends and deviations from self-similar models.
Contribution
It provides new measurements of galaxy profiles, luminosity functions, and halo occupation evolution in massive clusters over a wide redshift range, using optical data from the SPT-SZ survey.
Findings
Radial profiles consistent with NFW with specific concentrations.
Hints of redshift evolution in concentration parameters.
Halo occupation number decreases with redshift, indicating fewer galaxies per unit mass at higher redshift.
Abstract
We present a study of the optical properties of the 26 most massive galaxy clusters selected within the SPT-SZ 2500 deg survey. This Sunyaev-Zel'dovich effect selected sample spans a redshift range of 0.10 < z < 1.13. We measure the galaxy radial profile, the luminosity function (LF), and the halo occupation number (HON) using optical data with a typical depth of + 2. The stacked radial profiles are consistent with a NFW profile with a concentration of for the red sequence (RS) and for the total population. Stacking the data in multiple redshift bins shows a hint of redshift evolution in the concentration when both the total population is used, and when only RS galaxies are used (at 2.1 and 2.8, respectively). The stacked LF shows a faint end slope for the total and $\alpha =…
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