The Distribution of Dark and Luminous Matter in the Unique Galaxy Cluster Merger Abell 2146
Lindsay J. King, Douglas I. Clowe, Joseph E. Coleman, Helen R., Russell, Rebecca Santana, Jacob A. White, Rebecca E. A. Canning, Nicole J., Deering, Andrew C. Fabian, Brandyn E. Lee, Baojiu Li, Brian R. McNamara

TL;DR
This study uses weak gravitational lensing to map the distribution of dark and luminous matter in the merging galaxy cluster Abell 2146, revealing the primary mass component and comparing it with X-ray observations.
Contribution
It provides the first weak lensing mass reconstruction of Abell 2146, identifying the primary halo and analyzing the merger dynamics with simulations.
Findings
Mass peak in Abell 2146-A is centered on the BCG.
Abell 2146-A's mass is dominant over Abell 2146-B.
The mass distribution aligns with the BCG and X-ray data within resolution limits.
Abstract
Abell 2146 ( = 0.232) consists of two galaxy clusters undergoing a major merger. The system was discovered in previous work, where two large shock fronts were detected using the , consistent with a merger close to the plane of the sky, caught soon after first core passage. A weak gravitational lensing analysis of the total gravitating mass in the system, using the distorted shapes of distant galaxies seen with ACS-WFC on , is presented. The highest peak in the reconstruction of the projected mass is centred on the Brightest Cluster Galaxy (BCG) in Abell 2146-A. The mass associated with Abell 2146-B is more extended. Bootstrapped noise mass reconstructions show the mass peak in Abell 2146-A to be consistently centred on the BCG. Previous work showed that BCG-A appears to lag behind an X-ray cool core; although the…
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