16 research outputs found
Constraining halo properties from galaxy-galaxy lensing and photo-z
Here we present results from a maximum likelihood analysis of galaxy-galaxy
weak lensing effects as measured in a 12.5' x 12.5' field obtained at the
Nordic Optical Telescope, on La Palma, Spain. The analysis incorporates
photometric redshifts and gives circular velocities consistent with previous
weak lensing work.Comment: to appear in the proceedings of the Yale 2001 Cosmology Workshop on
the Shapes of Galaxies and Their Halos (4 pages
Breaking the Disk/Halo Degeneracy with Gravitational Lensing
The degeneracy between the disk and the dark matter contribution to galaxy
rotation curves remains an important uncertainty in our understanding of disk
galaxies. Here we discuss a new method for breaking this degeneracy using
gravitational lensing by spiral galaxies, and apply this method to the spiral
lens B1600+434 as an example. The combined image and lens photometry
constraints allow models for B1600+434 with either a nearly singular dark
matter halo, or a halo with a sizable core. A maximum disk model is ruled out
with high confidence. Further information, such as the circular velocity of
this galaxy, will help break the degeneracies. Future studies of spiral galaxy
lenses will be able to determine the relative contribution of disk, bulge, and
halo to the mass in the inner parts of galaxies.Comment: Replaced with minor revisions, a typo fixed, and reference added; 21
pages, 8 figures, ApJ accepte
The time delay of the quadruple quasar RX J0911.4+0551
We present optical lightcurves of the gravitationally lensed components A
(=A1+A2+A3) and B of the quadruple quasar RX J0911.4+0551 (z = 2.80). The
observations were primarily obtained at the Nordic Optical Telescope between
1997 March and 2001 April and consist of 74 I-band data points for each
component. The data allow the measurement of a time delay of 146 +- 8 days (2
sigma) between A and B, with B as the leading component. This value is
significantly shorter than that predicted from simple models and indicates a
very large external shear. Mass models including the main lens galaxy and the
surrounding massive cluster of galaxies at z = 0.77, responsible for the
external shear, yield H_0 = 71 +- 4 (random, 2 sigma) +- 8 (systematic)
km/s/Mpc. The systematic model uncertainty is governed by the surface-mass
density (convergence) at the location of the multiple images.Comment: 12 pages, 3 figures, ApJL, in press (June 20, 2002
The Afterglow and Complex Environment of the Optically Dim Burst GRB 980613
We report the identification of the optical afterglow of GRB 980613 in R- and I-band images obtained between 16 and 48 hr after the gamma-ray burst. Early near-infrared (NIR) H and K\u27 observations are also reported. The afterglow was optically faint (R â 23) at discovery but did not exhibit an unusually rapid decay (power-law decay slope α \u3c 1.8 at 2 Ï). The optical/NIR spectral index (ÎČRH \u3c 1.1) was consistent with the optical-to-X-ray spectral index (ÎČRX â 0.6), indicating a maximal reddening of the afterglow of â0.45 mag in R. Hence, the dimness of the optical afterglow was mainly due to the fairly flat spectral shape rather than internal reddening in the host galaxy. We also present late-time Hubble Space Telescope/Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph images of the field in which GRB 980613 occurred, obtained 799 days after the burst. These images show that GRB 980613 was located close to a very compact, blue V = 26.1 object inside a complex region consisting of star-forming knots and/or interacting galaxy fragments. Therefore, GRB 980613 constitutes a strong case for the association of cosmological gamma-ray bursts with star-forming regions
FUNDAMENTAL PROPERTIES OF GRB-SELECTED GALAXIES: A SWIFT/VLT LEGACY SURVEY
We present the motivation, aims and preliminary result from the Swift/VLT legacy survey on gamma-ray burst host galaxies. This survey will produce a homogeneous and well-understood host sample covering more than 95 % of the lookback time to the Big Bang, and allow us to characterize their fundamental properties. 1