Possible Ongoing Merger Discovered by Photometry and Spectroscopy in the Field of the Galaxy Cluster PLCK G165.7+67.0

Author:

Pascale MassimoORCID,Frye Brenda L.ORCID,Dai LiangORCID,Foo Nicholas,Qin YujingORCID,Leimbach Reagen,Bauer Adam MichaelORCID,Merlin EmilianoORCID,Coe DanORCID,Diego JoseORCID,Yan HaojingORCID,Zitrin AdiORCID,Cohen Seth H.ORCID,Conselice Christopher J.ORCID,Dole Hervé,Harrington KevinORCID,Jansen Rolf A.ORCID,Kamieneski Patrick,Windhorst Rogier A.ORCID,Yun Min S.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract We present a detailed study of the Planck-selected binary galaxy cluster PLCK G165.7+67.0 (G165; z = 0.348). A multiband photometric catalog is generated incorporating new imaging from the Large Binocular Telescope/Large Binocular Camera and Spitzer/IRAC to existing imaging. To cope with the different image characteristics, robust methods are applied in the extraction of the matched-aperture photometry. Photometric redshifts are estimated for 143 galaxies in the 4 arcmin2 field of overlap covered by these data. We confirm that strong-lensing effects yield 30 images of 11 background galaxies, of which we contribute new photometric redshift estimates for three image multiplicities. These constraints enable the construction of a revised lens model with a total mass of M 600 kpc = (2.36 ± 0.23) × 1014 M . In parallel, new spectroscopy using MMT/Binospec and archival data contributes thirteen galaxies that meet our velocity and transverse radius criteria for cluster membership. The two cluster components have a pair-wise velocity of ≲100 km s−1, favoring an orientation in the plane of the sky with a transverse velocity of 100–1700 km s−1. At the same time, the brightest cluster galaxy (BCG) is offset in velocity from the systemic mean value, suggesting dynamical disturbance. New LOFAR and Very Large Array data uncover head-tail radio galaxies in the BCG and a large red galaxy in the northeast component. From the orientation and alignment of the four radio trails, we infer that the two cluster components have already traversed each other, and are now exiting the cluster.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Alfred P. Sloan Foundation

NASA ∣ Goddard Space Flight Center

United States - Israel Binational Science Foundation

Space Telescope Science Institute

MEC ∣ Agencia Estatal de Investigación

Publisher

American Astronomical Society

Subject

Space and Planetary Science,Astronomy and Astrophysics

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