4.7 Article

SPECTROSCOPIC CONFIRMATION OF A MASSIVE RED-SEQUENCE-SELECTED GALAXY CLUSTER AT z=1.34 IN THE SpARCS-SOUTH CLUSTER SURVEY

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 698, Issue 2, Pages 1943-1950

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/698/2/1943

Keywords

cosmology: observations; galaxies: clusters: general; galaxies: high-redshift; infrared: galaxies surveys

Funding

  1. JPL/Caltech
  2. College of Natural and Agricultural Sciences

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The Spitzer Adaptation of the Red-sequence Cluster Survey (SpARCS) is a z'-passband imaging survey, consisting of deep (z' similar or equal to 24 AB) observations made from both hemispheres using the CFHT 3.6 m and CTIO 4 m telescopes. The survey was designed with the primary aim of detecting galaxy clusters at z > 1. In tandem with pre-existing 3.6 mu m observations from the Spitzer Space Telescope SWIRE Legacy Survey, SpARCS detects clusters using an infrared adaptation of the two-filter red-sequence cluster technique. The total effective area of the SpARCS cluster survey is 41.9 deg(2). In this paper, we provide an overview of the 13.6 deg(2) Southern CTIO/MOSAIC II observations. The 28.3 deg(2) Northern CFHT/MegaCam observations are summarized in a companion paper by Muzzin et al. In this paper, we also report spectroscopic confirmation of SpARCS J003550-431224, a very rich galaxy cluster at z = 1.335, discovered in the ELAIS-S1 field. To date, this is the highest spectroscopically confirmed redshift for a galaxy cluster discovered using the red-sequence technique. Based on nine confirmed members, SpARCS J003550-431224 has a preliminary velocity dispersion of 1050 +/- 230 km s(-1). With its proven capability for efficient cluster detection, SpARCS is a demonstration that we have entered an era of large, homogeneously selected z > 1 cluster surveys.

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