Weak and strong lensing analysis of the triaxial matter distribution of A1689

Abstract

Halos formed in the standard Lambda cold dark matter framework should follow an universal mass density profile and fit a well defined mass-concentration relation. Lensing analyses of clusters with a large Einstein radius seem to contradict this scenario, with the massive cluster Abell 1689 being often claimed as a notable example of a highly over-concentrated halo. Shape and orientation biases in lensing studies might be at the basis of this disagreement between theory and observations. We developed a method for a full three-dimensional analysis of strong and weak lensing data. Surface density maps estimated from lensing are de-projected to infer the actual triaxial structure of the cluster, whose mass distribution is approximated as an ellipsoidal Navarro-Frenk-White halo with arbitrary orientation. Inversion is performed under competing a priori assumptions, integrated in the method thanks to Bayesian statistics. We applied the method to A1689. Whatever the considered priors on shape and orientation, both weak and strong lensing analyses found the halo to be slightly over-concentrated but still consistent with theoretical predictions. We found some evidence for a mildly triaxial lens (minor to major axis ratio ~ 0.5 +- 0.2) with the major axis orientated along the line of sight. Exploiting priors from N-body simulations, we found mass M200 = (1.3 +- 0.4)x 1015MSun and concentration c200 =10+-3 for the weak lensing analysis of Subaru data, M200 = (1.7 +- 0.3)x 1015MSun and c200 =6.1+-0.9 for the strong lensing analysis of multiple image systems, and M200 = (1.3 +- 0.2)× 1015MSun and c200 =7.3+-0.8 for the combined weak plus strong analysis.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…