Euclid: Early Release Observations. A combined strong and weak lensing solution for Abell 2390 beyond its virial radius
J. M. Diego, G. Congedo, R. Gavazzi, T. Schrabback, H. Atek, B. Jain, J. R. Weaver, Y. Kang, W. G. Hartley, G. Mahler, N. Okabe, J. B. Golden-Marx, M. Meneghetti, J. M. Palencia, M. Kluge, R. Laureijs, T. Saifollahi, M. Schirmer, C. Stone, M. Jauzac, D. Scott, B. Altieri

TL;DR
This paper presents a joint strong and weak lensing analysis of the galaxy cluster Abell 2390 using Euclid's early observations, accurately constraining its mass profile beyond the virial radius and confirming its relaxed state.
Contribution
It introduces a combined SL and WL methodology applied to Euclid data to measure cluster mass profiles over a wide radius range, extending beyond previous studies.
Findings
Derived virial mass M200 = (1.48 ± 0.29)×10^15 Msun
Confirmed the cluster's relaxed state through consistency with X-ray data
Profile well described by an NFW model with concentration c=6.5
Abstract
Euclid is presently mapping the distribution of matter in the Universe in detail via the weak lensing (WL) signature of billions of distant galaxies. The WL signal is most prominent around galaxy clusters, and can extend up to distances well beyond their virial radius, thus constraining their total mass. Near the centre of clusters, where contamination by member galaxies is an issue, the WL data can be complemented with strong lensing (SL) data which can diminish the uncertainty due to the mass-sheet degeneracy and provide high-resolution information about the distribution of matter in the centre of clusters. Here we present a joint SL and WL analysis of the Euclid Early Release Observations of the cluster Abell 2390 at z=0.228. Thanks to Euclid's wide field of view of 0.5 deg^2, combined with its angular resolution in the visible band of 0."13 and sampling of 0."1 per pixel, we…
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