Evidence for Tidal Stripping of Dark Matter Halos in Massive Cluster Lenses

  • Natarajan P
  • Kneib J
  • Smail I
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Abstract

In this letter, we present the results of our study of galaxy-galaxy lensing in massive cluster-lenses spanning z = 0.17 to 0.58, utilizing high-quality archival it Hubble Space Telescope (it HST) data. Local anisotropies in the shear maps are assumed to arise from dark matter substructure within these clusters. Associating the substructure with bright early-type cluster galaxies, we quantify the properties of typical L cluster members in a statistical fashion. The fraction of total mass associated with individual galaxies within the inner regions of these clusters ranges from 10-20% implying that the bulk of the dark matter in massive lensing clusters is smoothly distributed. Looking at the properties of the cluster galaxies, we find strong evidence (>3-sigma significance) that a fiducial early-type L ast galaxy in these clusters has a mass distribution that is tidally truncated compared to equivalent luminosity galaxies in the field. In fact, we exclude field galaxy scale dark halos for these cluster early-types at >10-sigma significance. We compare the tidal radii obtained from this lensing analysis with the central density of the cluster potentials and find a correlation which is in excellent agreement with theoretical expectations of tidal truncation: log rt propto (-0.6pm 0.2) log rho0.

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Natarajan, P., Kneib, J.-P., & Smail, I. (2002). Evidence for Tidal Stripping of Dark Matter Halos in Massive Cluster Lenses. The Astrophysical Journal, 580(1), L11–L15. https://doi.org/10.1086/345399

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