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The Astrophysical Journal Letters 707 (2009) L163-L168
Hubble Space Telescope Observations of a Spectacular New Strong-Lensing Galaxy Cluster: MACS J1149.5+2223 at z = 0.544
Graham P. Smith 1, Harald Ebeling 2, Marceau Limousin 3, Jean-Paul Kneib 3, A. M. Swinbank 4, Cheng-Jiun Ma 2, Mathilde Jauzac 3, Johan Richard 4, Eric Jullo 5, David J. Sand 5, Alastair C. Edge 4, Ian Smail 4
(12/2009)

We present Advanced Camera for Surveys observations of MACS J1149.5+2223, an X-ray luminous galaxy cluster at z = 0.544 discovered by the Massive Cluster Survey. The data reveal at least seven multiply imaged galaxies, three of which we have confirmed spectroscopically. One of these is a spectacular face-on spiral galaxy at z = 1.491, the four images of which are gravitationally magnified by 8 lsim μ lsim 23. We identify this as an L sstarf (MB sime -20.7), disk-dominated (B/T lsim 0.5) galaxy, forming stars at ~6 M sun yr-1. We use a robust sample of multiply imaged galaxies to constrain a parameterized model of the cluster mass distribution. In addition to the main cluster dark matter halo and the bright cluster galaxies, our best model includes three galaxy-group-sized halos. The relative probability of this model is P(N halo = 4)/P(N halo < 4) >= 1012 where N halo is the number of cluster/group-scale halos. In terms of sheer number of merging cluster/group-scale components, this is the most complex strong-lensing cluster core studied to date. The total cluster mass and fraction of that mass associated with substructures within R <= 500 kpc, are measured to be M tot = (6.7 ± 0.4) × 1014 M sun and f sub = 0.25 ± 0.12, respectively. Our model also rules out recent claims of a flat density profile at gsim7σ confidence, thus highlighting the critical importance of spectroscopic redshifts of multiply imaged galaxies when modeling strong-lensing clusters. Overall our results attest to the efficiency of X-ray selection in finding the most powerful cluster lenses, including complicated merging systems.
1 :  Univ. Birmingham
Univ. Birmingham
2 :  Institute for Astronomy (CFHT)
University of Hawaii
3 :  Laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Marseille (LAM)
CNRS : UMR6110 – INSU – Université de Provence - Aix-Marseille I
4 :  Department of Physics
Durham University
5 :  Department of Astronomy
California Institute of Technology
Planète et Univers/Astrophysique/Cosmologie et astrophysique extra-galactique

Physique/Astrophysique/Cosmologie et astrophysique extra-galactique
cosmology: observations – galaxies: clusters: individual: MACSJ1149.5+2233 – galaxies: evolution – gravitational lensing
Lien vers le texte intégral : 
http://fr.arXiv.org/abs/0911.2003