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27 April 2024
 
  » arxiv » astro-ph/9805155

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A Study of Nine High-Redshift Clusters of Galaxies: II. Photometry, Spectra, and Ages of Clusters 0023+0423 and 1604+4304
Marc Postman ; Lori M. Lubin ; J. B. Oke ;
Date 12 May 1998
Subject astro-ph
AffiliationSTScI), Lori M. Lubin (Caltech), J. B. Oke (DAO
AbstractWe present an extensive photometric and spectroscopic study of two high-redshift clusters of galaxies based on data obtained from the Keck 10m telescopes and the Hubble Space Telescope. The clusters CL0023+0423 (z=0.84) and CL1604+4304 (z=0.90) are part of a multi-wavelength program to study nine candidate clusters at z > 0.6 (Oke, Postman & Lubin 1998). Based on these observations, we study in detail both the field and cluster populations. From the confirmed cluster members, we find that CL0023+0423 actually consists of two components separated by ~2900 km/s. A kinematic analysis indicates that the two components are a poor cluster with ~3 x 10^{14} solar masses and a less massive group with 10^{13} solar masses. CL1604+4304 is a centrally concentrated, rich cluster at z = 0.8967 with a velocity dispersion of 1226 km/s and a mass of ~3 x 10^{15} solar masses. Approximately 57% and 50% of the galaxies show high levels of star formation in CL0023+0423 and CL1604+4304, respectively. These numbers are significantly larger than those found in intermediate redshift clusters. We also observe many old, red galaxies. Found mainly in CL1604+4304, they have spectra consistent with passive stellar evolution, typical of the early-type galaxies in low and intermediate-redshift clusters. We have calculated their ages by comparing their spectral energy distributions to standard Bruzual & Charlot evolutionary models. We find that their colors are consistent with models having an exponentially decreasing star formation rate with a time constant of 0.6 Gyr. We observe a significant luminosity brightening in our brightest cluster galaxies. Compared to BCGs at z < 0.1, we find a luminosity increase of ~1 mag in the rest B-band and ~0.8 mag in the rest V-band.
Source arXiv, astro-ph/9805155
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