An Assessment of the In-Situ Growth of the Intracluster Light in the High Redshift Galaxy Cluster SpARCS1049+56
Capucine Barfety, F\'elix-Antoine Valin, Tracy M.A. Webb, Min Yun,, Heath Shipley, Kyle Boone, Brian Hayden, Julie Hlavacek-Larrondo, Adam, Muzzin, Allison G. Noble, Saul Perlmutter, Carter Rhea, Gillian Wilson, H.K.C, Yee

TL;DR
This paper investigates the in-situ growth of intracluster light in a high-redshift galaxy cluster, revealing a massive, star-forming tail structure fueled by molecular gas, contributing significantly to the cluster's stellar mass.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed observational evidence of runaway cooling fueling intense star formation and intracluster light growth at high redshift.
Findings
A large stellar mass exists in a tail-like structure near the BCG.
A massive reservoir of molecular gas fuels high star formation rates.
The event contributes approximately 15-21% of the cluster's intracluster light mass.
Abstract
The formation of the stellar mass within galaxy cluster cores is a poorly understood process. It features the complicated physics of cooling flows, AGN feedback, star formation and more. Here, we study the growth of the stellar mass in the vicinity of the Brightest Cluster Galaxy (BCG) in a z = 1.7 cluster, SpARCS1049+56. We synthesize a reanalysis of existing HST imaging, a previously published measurement of the star formation rate, and the results of new radio molecular gas spectroscopy. These analyses represent the past, present and future star formation respectively within this system. We show that a large amount of stellar mass -- between and depending on the data processing -- exists in a long and clumpy tail-like structure that lies roughly 12 kpc off the BCG. Spatially coincident with this…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
