The caustic method applied to The Three Hundred: prospects for upcoming CATARSIS and other surveys

Abstract

We investigate the expected uncertainties in recovering galaxy cluster mass profiles from upcoming spectroscopic survey data using The Three Hundred Project. Using the caustic technique, which leverages galaxy positions and line-of-sight velocities, we assess the systematic errors introduced by assumptions regarding velocity anisotropy and demonstrate how an iterative correction method can minimize these errors. We also assess the impact of survey magnitude limits on cluster mass estimates, highlighting potential biases across different observational strategies. We focus the analysis on our own CATARSIS survey, which aims at obtaining redshift measurements for all galaxies with magnitudes mAB,r < 22 within 2xR200c of 16 galaxy clusters with redshifts 0.14 < z < 0.27 using the future 8 arcmin2 field-of-view TARSIS integral-field spectrograph of the Calar Alto 3.5-m telescope. Such data will enable us to mitigate systematic errors in the determination of density profiles. CATARSIS aims at enhancing the precision of mass profile estimates by deepening our understanding of the dynamical states and physical characteristics of galaxy clusters.

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