We study the distribution of line-of-sight velocities of galaxies in the vicinity of Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS) red-sequence Matched-filter Probabilistic Percolation (redMaPPer) galaxy clusters. Based on their velocities, galaxies can be split into two categories: galaxies that are dynamically associated with the cluster, and random line-of-sight projections. Both the fraction of galaxies associated with the galaxy clusters, and the velocity dispersion of the same, exhibit a sharp feature as a function of radius. The feature occurs at a radial scale Redge ≈ 2.2Rλ, where Rλ is the cluster radius assigned by redMaPPer. We refer to Redge as the 'edge radius'. These results are naturally explained by a model that further splits the galaxies dynamically associated with a galaxy cluster into a component of galaxies orbiting the halo and an infalling galaxy component. The edge radius Redge constitutes a true 'cluster edge', in the sense that no orbiting structures exist past this radius. A companion paper tests whether the 'halo edge' hypothesis holds when investigating the full three-dimensional phase-space distribution of dark matter substructures in numerical simulations, and demonstrates that this radius coincides with a suitably defined splashback radius.
CITATION STYLE
Tomooka, P., Rozo, E., Wagoner, E. L., Aung, H., Nagai, D., & Safonova, S. (2020). Clusters have edges: The projected phase-space structure of SDSS redMaPPer clusters. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, 499(1), 1291–1299. https://doi.org/10.1093/mnras/staa2841
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.