The final WaZP galaxy cluster catalog of the Dark Energy Survey and comparison with SZE data
C. Benoist, M. Aguena, L. da Costa, J. Gschwend, S. Allam, O. Alves, F. Andrade-Oliveira, D. Bacon, L. Bleem, D. Brooks, A. Carnero Rosell, J. Carretero, F.J. Castander, M. Costanzi, J. De Vicente, S. Desai, S. Dodelson, P. Doel, S. Everett, B. Flaugher, J. Frieman

TL;DR
This paper presents a comprehensive galaxy cluster catalog from DES-Y6 using the WaZP finder, compares it with previous data and SZE surveys, and discusses the catalog's accuracy, completeness, and cross-matching results.
Contribution
The work introduces a large, homogenized galaxy cluster catalog from DES-Y6 using WaZP, improving redshift accuracy and cross-matching with SZE data, and compares it with earlier DES data.
Findings
Over 400,000 clusters detected up to redshift 1.3.
High recovery rate of clusters from previous catalog.
Strong correspondence between optical and SZE clusters.
Abstract
In this work, we present and characterize the galaxy cluster catalog detected by the WaZP cluster finder, which is not based on red-sequence identification, on the full six years of observations of the Dark Energy Survey (DES-Y6). The full catalog contains over 400k detected clusters with richnesses, Ngals, above 5 and that reach redshifts up to 1.3. We also provide a version of the catalog where the observation depth and richness computation are homogenized to be used for cosmology, containing 33k rich (Ngals >25) clusters. We compare our results with the previous WaZP catalog obtained from the DES first-year data release (DES-Y1). We find that essentially all clusters within the common footprint and depth limit are recovered. The deeper observations on DES-Y6 and the more complete available spectroscopic redshift sample lead to improvements in the redshifts of the clusters, resulting…
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.
Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astronomical Observations and Instrumentation
