The mass-richness relation of optically-selected clusters from weak gravitational lensing and abundance with Subaru HSC first-year data


الملخص بالإنكليزية

Constraining the relation between the richness $N$ and the halo mass $M$ over a wide redshift range for optically-selected clusters is a key ingredient for cluster-related science in optical surveys, including the Subaru Hyper Suprime-Cam (HSC) survey. We measure stacked weak lensing profiles around 1747 HSC CAMIRA clusters over a redshift range of $0.1leq z_{rm cl}leq 1.0$ with $Ngeq 15$ using the HSC first-year shear catalog covering $sim$$140$ ${rm deg^2}$. The exquisite depth and image quality of the HSC survey allow us to measure lensing signals around the high-redshift clusters at $0.7leq z_{rm cl}leq 1.0$ with a signal-to-noise ratio of 19 in the comoving radius range $0.5lesssim Rlesssim 15 h^{-1}{rm Mpc}$. We constrain richness-mass relations $P(ln N|M,z)$ of the HSC CAMIRA clusters assuming a log-normal distribution without informative priors on model parameters, by jointly fitting to the lensing profiles and abundance measurements under both Planck and WMAP cosmological models. We show that our model gives acceptable $p$-values when we add redshift dependent terms which are proportional to $ln (1+z)$ and $[ln (1+z)]^{2}$ into the mean and scatter relations of $P(ln N|M,z)$. Such terms presumably originate from the variation of photometric redshift errors as a function of the redshift. We show that the constraints on the mean relation $langle M|N rangle$ are consistent between the Planck and WMAP models, whereas the scatter values $sigma_{ln M|N}$ for the Planck model are systematically larger than those for the WMAP model. We also show that the scatter values for the Planck model increase toward lower richness values, whereas those for the WMAP model are consistent with constant values as a function of richness. This result highlights the importance of the scatter in the mass-richness relation for cluster cosmology.

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