Dark Energy Survey Year 3 Results: Mis-centering calibration and X-ray-richness scaling relations in redMaPPer clusters
astro-ph.CO
/ Authors
P. Kelly, J. Jobel, O. Eiger, A. Abd, T. E. Jeltema, P. Giles, D. L. Hollowood, R. D. Wilkinson, D. J. Turner, S. Bhargava
and 69 more authors
S. Everett, A. Farahi, A. K. Romer, E. S. Rykoff, F. Wang, S. Bocquet, D. Cross, R. Faridjoo, J. Franco, G. Gardner, M. Kwiecien, D. Laubner, A. McDaniel, J. H. O'Donnell, L. Sanchez, E. Schmidt, S. Sripada, A. Swart, E. Upsdell, A. Webber, M. Aguena, S. Allam, O. Alves, D. Bacon
/ Abstract
We use Dark Energy Survey Year 3 (DES Y3) clusters with archival X-ray data from XMM-Newton and Chandra to assess the centering performance of the redMaPPer cluster finder and to measure key richness observable scaling relations. In terms of centering, we find that 10-20% of redMaPPer clusters are miscentered with no significant difference in bins of low versus high richness ($20<λ<40$ and $λ>40$) or redshift ($0.2<z<0.4$ and $0.4 <z < 0.65$). We also investigate the richness bias induced by miscentering. The dominant reasons for miscentering include masked or missing data and the presence of other bright galaxies in the cluster; for half of the miscentered clusters the correct central was one of the other possible centrals identified by redMaPPer, while for $\sim 40$% of miscentered clusters the correct central is not a redMaPPer member with most of these cases due to masking. In addition, we fit the scaling relations between X-ray temperature and richness and between X-ray luminosity and richness. We find a T$_X$-$λ$ scatter of $0.21 \pm 0.01$. While the scatter in T$_X$-$λ$ is consistent in bins of redshift, we do find modestly different slopes with high-redshift clusters displaying a somewhat shallower relation. Splitting based on richness, we find a marginally larger scatter for our lowest richness bin, $20 < λ< 40$. The X-ray properties of detected, serendipitous clusters are generally consistent with those for targeted clusters, but the depth of the X-ray data for undetected clusters is insufficient to judge whether they are X-ray underluminous in all but one case.