We use photometric redshifts derived from new u -band through 4.5 μ m Spitzer IRAC photometry in the 4.8 deg 2 of the XMM -LSS field to construct surface density maps in the redshift range of 0.1–1.5. Our density maps show evidence for large-scale structure in the form of filaments spanning several tens of megaparsecs. Using these maps, we identify 339 overdensities that our simulated light-cone analysis suggests are likely associated with dark matter halos with masses, M halo , log( M halo / M ⊙ ) > 13.7. From this list of overdensities we recover 43 of 70 known X-ray-detected and spectroscopically confirmed clusters. The missing X-ray clusters are largely at lower redshifts and lower masses than our target log( M halo / M ⊙ ) > 13.7. The bulk of the overdensities are compact, but a quarter show extended morphologies that include likely projection effects, clusters embedded in apparent filaments, and at least one potential cluster merger (at z ∼ 1.28). The strongest overdensity in our highest-redshift slice (at z ∼ 1.5) shows a compact red galaxy core, potentially implying a massive evolved cluster.
CITATION STYLE
Krefting, N., Sajina, A., Lacy, M., Nyland, K., Farrah, D., Darvish, B., … Vaccari, M. (2020). The Role of Environment in Galaxy Evolution in the SERVS Survey. I. Density Maps and Cluster Candidates. The Astrophysical Journal, 889(2), 185. https://doi.org/10.3847/1538-4357/ab60a0
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