Cluster Mass Calibration at High Redshift: HST Weak Lensing Analysis of 13 Distant Galaxy Clusters from the South Pole Telescope Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Survey
T. Schrabback, D. Applegate, J. P. Dietrich, H. Hoekstra, S. Bocquet,, A. H. Gonzalez, A. von der Linden, M. McDonald, C. B. Morrison, S. F. Raihan,, S. W. Allen, M. Bayliss, B. A. Benson, L. E. Bleem, I. Chiu, S. Desai, R. J., Foley, T. de Haan, F. W. High, S. Hilbert

TL;DR
This study uses HST weak lensing to calibrate the mass of 13 high-redshift galaxy clusters from the SPT survey, improving understanding of cluster scaling relations for cosmology.
Contribution
It introduces new strategies to control systematics in weak lensing analysis of high-redshift clusters, enabling more accurate mass calibration.
Findings
Calibrated the mass-temperature relation normalization to A=1.81.
Measured average cluster concentration to c_200c=5.6.
Confirmed consistency with self-similar evolution at high redshift.
Abstract
We present an HST/ACS weak gravitational lensing analysis of 13 massive high-redshift (z_median=0.88) galaxy clusters discovered in the South Pole Telescope (SPT) Sunyaev-Zel'dovich Survey. This study is part of a larger campaign that aims to robustly calibrate mass-observable scaling relations over a wide range in redshift to enable improved cosmological constraints from the SPT cluster sample. We introduce new strategies to ensure that systematics in the lensing analysis do not degrade constraints on cluster scaling relations significantly. First, we efficiently remove cluster members from the source sample by selecting very blue galaxies in V-I colour. Our estimate of the source redshift distribution is based on CANDELS data, where we carefully mimic the source selection criteria of the cluster fields. We apply a statistical correction for systematic photometric redshift errors as…
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