Chandra and optical/IR observations of CXOJ1415.2+3610, a massive, newly discovered galaxy cluster at z~1.5
Abstract
(Abridged) We report the discovery of CXO J1415.2+3610, a distant (z~1.5) galaxy cluster serendipitously detected in a deep, high-resolution Chandra observation targeted to study the cluster WARP J1415.1+3612 at z=1.03. This is the highest-z cluster discovered with Chandra so far. Moreover, the total exposure time of 280 ks with ACIS-S provides the deepest X-ray observation currently achieved on a cluster at z>1.5. We perform an X-ray spectral fit of the extended emission of the intracluster medium (ICM) with XSPEC, and we detect at a 99.5% confidence level the rest frame 6.7-6.9 keV Iron Kα line complex, from which we obtain zX=1.460.025. The analysis of the z-3.6μ m color-magnitude diagram shows a well defined sequence of red galaxies within 1' from the cluster X-ray emission peak with a color range [5 < z-3.6 μ m < 6]. The photometric redshift obtained by spectral energy distribution (SED) fitting is zphot=1.47 0.25. After fixing the redshift to z=1.46, we perform the final spectral analysis and measure the average gas temperature with a 20% error, kT=5.8+1.2-1.0 keV, and the Fe abundance ZFe = 1.3-0.5+0.8Z. We fit the background subtracted surface brightness with a single beta--model out to 35" and derive the deprojected electron density profile. The ICM mass is 1.09-0.2+0.3× 1013 M within 300 kpc. The total mass is M2500= 8.6-1.7+2.1 × 10 13 M for R2500=(220 55) kpc. Extrapolating the profile at larger radii we find M500= 2.1-0.5+0.7 × 10 14 M for R500 = 510-50+55$ kpc. This analysis establishes CXOJ1415.2+3610 as one of the best characterized distant galaxy clusters based on X-ray data alone.
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