4.7 Article

Mass and Light of Abell 370: A Strong and Weak Lensing Analysis

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 868, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.3847/1538-4357/aae834

Keywords

galaxies : clusters: individual (Abell 370); galaxies: high-redshift

Funding

  1. NASA
  2. JPL/Caltech
  3. HST/STScI [HST-AR-13235, HST-AR-14280, HST-GO-13177]
  4. NASA through the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) [HST-GO-13459]
  5. HST Frontier Fields program
  6. NASA [NAS 5-26555]
  7. Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Researcher Award [PD0028506]
  8. NASA through HST [HST-GO-13459, HST-GO-14280]

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We present a new gravitational lens model of the Hubble Frontier Fields cluster Abell 370 (z = 0.375) using imaging and spectroscopy from Hubble Space Telescope and ground-based spectroscopy. We combine constraints from a catalog of 909 weakly lensed galaxies and 39 multiply imaged sources comprised of 114 multiple images, including a system of multiply imaged candidates at z = 7.84 +/- 0.02, to obtain a best-fit mass distribution using the cluster lens modeling code Strong and Weak Lensing United. As the only analysis of A370 using strong and weak lensing constraints from Hubble Frontier Fields data, our method provides an independent check of assumptions on the mass distribution used in other methods. Convergence, shear, and magnification maps are made publicly available through the HFF website (http://www,stsci.eduihst/campaign/frontier-fields). We find that the model we produce is similar to models produced by other groups, with some exceptions due to the differences in lensing code methodology. In an effort to study how our total projected mass distribution traces light, we measure the stellar mass density distribution using Spitzer/Infrared Array Camera imaging. Comparing our total mass density to our stellar mass density in a radius of 0.3 Mpc, we find a mean projected stellar to total mass ratio of < f *> = 0.011 +/- 0.003 (stat.) using the diet Salpeter initial mass function. This value is in general agreement with independent measurements of < f*> in clusters of similar total mass and redshift.

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