4.6 Article

On the nature of the EIS candidate clusters:: Confirmation of z≳0.6 candidates

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 380, Issue 2, Pages 460-470

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361:20011457

Keywords

galaxies : clusters : general; large-scale structure of Universe; cosmology : observations

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We use publicly available V-band imaging data from the wide-angle surveys conducted by the ESO Imaging Survey project (EIS) to further investigate the nature of the EIS galaxy cluster candidates. These were originally identified by applying a matched-filter algorithm which used positional and photometric data of the galaxy sample extracted from the I-band survey images. In this paper, we apply the same technique to the galaxy sample extracted from V-band data and compare the new cluster detections with the original ones. We find that similar to 75% of the low-redshift cluster candidates (z less than or similar to 0.6) are detected in both passbands and their estimated redshifts show good agreement with the scatter in the redshift differences being consistent with the estimated errors of the method. For the robust I-band detections the matching frequency approaches similar to 85%. We also use the available (V - I) color to search for the red sequence of early-type galaxies observed in rich clusters over a broad range of redshifts. This is done by searching for a simultaneous overdensity in the three-dimensional color-projected distance space. We find significant overdensities for similar to 75% of the robust candidates with z(I) less than or similar to 0.6. We find good agreement between the characteristic color associated to the detected red sequence and that predicted by passive evolution galaxy models for ellipticals at the redshift estimated by the matched-filter. The results presented in this paper show the usefulness of color data, even of two-band data, to both tentatively confirm cluster candidates and to select possible cluster members for spectroscopic observations. Based on the present results, we estimate that similar to 150 EIS clusters with z(I) less than or similar to 0.6 are real, making it one of the largest samples of galaxy clusters in this redshift range currently available in the southern hemisphere.

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