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We discuss how to use the Rees-Sciama (RS) effect associated with merging clusters of galaxies to measure their kinematic properties. In a previous work (Rubino-Martin et al. 2004), the morphology and symmetries of the effect were examined by means of a simplified model. Here, we use realistic N-body simulations to better describe the effect, and to confirm that the signal has a characteristic quadrupole structure. From the amplitude of the signal obtained, we conclude that it is necessary to combine several cluster mergers in order to achieve a detection. Using the extended Press-Schechter formalism, we characterized the expected distribution of the parameters describing the mergers, and we used these results to generate realistic mock catalogues of cluster mergers. To optimize the extraction of the RS signal, we developed an extension of the spatial filtering method described in Haehnelt & Tegmark (1996). This extended filter has a general definition, so it can be applied in many other fields, such as gravitational lensing of the CMB or lensing of background galaxies. It has been applied to our mock catalogues, and we show that with the announced sensitivities of future experiments like the Atacama Cosmology Telescope (ACT), the South Pole Telescope (SPT) or the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA), a detection of the signal will be possible if we consider of the order of 1,000 cluster mergers.
Observations of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB) have revealed an unexpected quadrupole-octopole alignment along a preferred axis pointing toward the Virgo cluster. We here investigate whether this feature can be explained in the framework of th
We introduce a new estimator for the mean pairwise velocities of galaxy clusters, which is based on the measurement of the clusters $textit{transverse}$ velocity components. The Rees-Sciama (RS) effect offers an opportunity to measure transverse pecu
We present results from Chandra and XMM-Newton observations of Abell 98 (A98), a galaxy cluster with three major components: a relatively bright subcluster to the north (A98N), a disturbed subcluster to the south (A98S), and a fainter subcluster to t
We compile a sample of spectroscopically- and photometrically-selected cluster galaxies from four high-redshift galaxy clusters ($1.59 < z < 1.71$) from the Spitzer Adaptation of the Red-Sequence Cluster Survey (SpARCS), and a comparison field sample
Analysis of a 30,000 s X-ray observation of the Abell 3266 galaxy cluster with the ACIS on board the Chandra Observatory has produced several new insights into the cluster merger. The intracluster medium has a non-monotonically decreasing radial abun