Joint HST, VLT/MUSE and XMM-Newton observations to constrain the mass distribution of the two strong lensing galaxy clusters: MACS J0242.5-2132 & MACS J0949.8+1708
Joseph F. V. Allingham, Mathilde Jauzac, David J. Lagattuta, Guillaume, Mahler, C\'eline B{\oe}hm, Geraint F. Lewis, Dominique Eckert, Alastair Edge,, and Stefano Ettori

TL;DR
This study combines HST, MUSE, and XMM-Newton data to model the mass distribution of two galaxy clusters, revealing their dynamical states and dark matter profiles with high precision.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed joint lensing and X-ray analysis of these clusters, including precise redshift measurements and mass modeling.
Findings
MACS J0242 is a relaxed cluster with a NFW density profile.
MACS J0949 is a post-merger cluster with a flat dark matter core.
Mass estimates are consistent with X-ray observations.
Abstract
We present the strong lensing analysis of two galaxy clusters: MACS J0242.5-2132 (MACS J0242, ) and MACS J0949.8+1708 (MACS J0949, ). Their total matter distributions are constrained thanks to the powerful combination of observations with the Hubble Space Telescope and the MUSE instrument. Using these observations, we precisely measure the redshift of six multiple image systems in MACS J0242, and two in MACS J0949. We also include four multiple image systems in the latter cluster identified in HST imaging without MUSE redshift measurements. For each cluster, our best-fit mass model consists of a single cluster-scale halo, and 57 (170) galaxy-scale halos for MACS J0242 (MACS J0949). Multiple images positions are predicted with a 0.39 arcsec and 0.15 arcsec for MACS J0242 and MACS J0949 models respectively. From these mass models, we derive aperture masses of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Adaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
