29 research outputs found

    What Do Gravitational Lens Time Delays Measure?

    Full text link
    Gravitational lens time delays depend on the Hubble constant, the observed image positions, and the surface mass density of the lens in the annulus between the images. Simple time delay lenses like PG1115+080, SBS1520+530, B1600+434, PKS1830-211 and HE2149-2745 have H0 = A(1-)+B(e-1) where the two coefficients A ~ 90km/s Mpc and B ~ 10km/s Mpc depend on the measured delays and the observed image positions, is the mean surface density in the annulus between the images, and there is a small correction from the logarithmic slope e ~ 2 of the surface density profile, k ~ R^(1-e), in the annulus. These 5 systems are very homogeneous, since for fixed H0=100h km/s Mpc they must have the same surface density, =1.11-1.22 h +/- 0.04, with an upper bound of 0.07 on any dispersion in beyond those due to the measurement errors. If the lenses have their expected dark halos, ~ 0.5 and H0=51+/-5 km/s Mpc, while if they have constant mass-to-light ratios, ~ 0.1-0.2 and H0=73+/-8 km/s Mpc. More complicated lenses with multiple components or strong perturbations from nearby clusters, like RXJ0911+0551 and Q0957+561, are easily recognized because they have significantly different coefficients.Comment: Submitted to ApJ. 18 pages, no figure

    Determining the Hubble Constant from the Gravitational Lens PG 1115+080

    Get PDF
    For the quadruple gravitational lens PG 1115+080, we combine recent measurements of the time delays with new lens models to determine the Hubble constant H_0. We explore the effects of systematic uncertainties in the lens models on the estimates of H_0, and we discuss how the uncertainties can be reduced by future observations. We find that the lens cannot be fit by an isolated lens galaxy, but that it can be well fit by including a perturbation from the nearby group of galaxies. To understand the full range of systematic uncertainties it is crucial to use an ellipsoidal galaxy and to let the group position vary. In this case, the existing constraints cannot break degeneracies in the models with respect to the profiles of the galaxy and group and to the position of the group. Combining the known time delays with a range of lens models incorporating most of the plausible systematic effects yields H_0 = 51_{-13}^{+14} km s^{-1} Mpc^{-1}. The constraints on the lens models, and hence on H_0, can be improved by reducing the standard errors in the lens galaxy position from 50 mas to \sim10 mas, reducing the uncertainties in the time delays to \sim0.5 days, and constraining the lens mass distribution using HST photometry and the fundamental plane. In particular, the time delay ratio r_{ABC} = \Delta\tau_{AC} / \Delta\tau_{BA} may provide the best constraint on the mass profile of the galaxy.Comment: revised to use the updated time delays of Bar-Kana astro-ph/9701068; 30 pages, 7 Postscript figures, to appear in Ap

    Gravitational Waveguides in Cosmology

    Get PDF
    We discuss the possibility that, besides the usual gravitational lensing, there may exist a sort of gravitational waveguiding in cosmology which could explain some anomalous phenomena which cannot be understood by the current gravitational lensing models as the existence of "brothers" objects having different brilliancy but similar spectra and redshifts posed on the sky with large angular distance. Furthermore, such a phenomena could explain the huge luminosities coming from quasars using the cosmological structures as selfoc-type or planar waveguide. We describe the gravitational waveguide theory and then we discuss possible realizations in cosmology.Comment: 14 pages, latex, submitted to Int. Jou. Mod. Phys.

    Rotating Nuclear Rings and Extreme Starbursts in Ultraluminous Galaxies

    Full text link
    New high resolution interferometer data of 10 IR ultraluminous galaxies shows the molecular gas is in rotating nuclear rings or disks with radii 300 to 800 pc. Most of the CO flux comes from a moderate-density, warm, intercloud medium rather than self-gravitating clouds. Gas masses of ~ 5 x 10^9 Msun, 5 times lower than the standard method are derived from a model of the molecular disks. The ratio of molecular gas to dynamical mass, is M_gas/M_dyn ~ 1/6 with a maximum ratio of gas to total mass surface density of 1/3. For the galaxies VIIZw31, Arp193, and IRAS 10565+24, there is good evidence for rotating molecular rings with a central gap. In addition to the rotating rings a new class of star formation region is identified which we call an Extreme Starburst. They have a characteristic size of only 100 pc., about 10^9 Msun of gas and an IR luminosity of ~3 x 10^11 Lsun. Four extreme starbursts are identified in the 3 closest galaxies in the sample Arp220, Arp193 and Mrk273. They are the most prodigious star formation events in the local universe, each representing about 1000 times as many OB stars as 30 Doradus. In Arp220, the CO and 1.3 mm continuum maps show the two ``nuclei'' embedded in a central ring or disk and a fainter structure extending 3 kpc to the east, normal to the nuclear disk. There is no evidence that these sources really are the pre-merger nuclei. They are compact, extreme starburst regions containing 10^9 Msun of dense molecular gas and new stars, but no old stars. Most of the dust emission and HCN emission arises in the two extreme starbursts. The entire bolometric luminosity of Arp~220 comes from starbursts, not an AGN. In Mrk231, the disk geometry shows that the molecular disk cannot be heated by the AGN; the far IR luminosity of Mrk~231 is powered by a starburst, not the AGN. (Abridged)Comment: 97 pages Latex with aasms.sty, including 29 encapsulated Postscript figures. Figs 18 and 23 are GIFs. 31 figures total. Text and higher quality versions of figures available at http://sbastk.ess.sunysb.edu/www/RINGS_ESB_PREPRINT.html To be published in Ap. J., 10 Nov. 199

    Cosmological waveguides for gravitational waves

    Get PDF
    We study the linearized equations describing the propagation of gravitational waves through dust. In the leading order of the WKB approximation, dust behaves as a non-dispersive, non-dissipative medium. Taking advantage of these features, we explore the possibility that a gravitational wave from a distant source gets trapped by the gravitational field of a long filament of galaxies of the kind seen in the large scale structure of the Universe. Such a waveguiding effect may lead to a huge magnification of the radiation from distant sources, thus lowering the sensitivity required for a successful detection of gravitational waves by detectors like VIRGO, LIGO and LISA.Comment: 19 pages, compressed Latex fil

    A quadruply imaged quasar with an optical Einstein ring candidate: 1RXS J113155.4-123155

    Full text link
    We report the discovery of a new quadruply imaged quasar surrounded by an optical Einstein ring candidate. Spectra of the different components of 1RXS J113155.4-123155 reveal a source at z=0.658. Up to now, this object is the closest known gravitationally lensed quasar. The lensing galaxy is clearly detected. Its redshift is measured to be z=0.295. Additionally, the total V magnitude of the system has varied by 0.3 mag between two epochs separated by 33 weeks. The measured relative astrometry of the lensed images is best fitted with an SIS model plus shear. This modeling suggests very high magnification of the source (up to 50 for the total magnification) and predicts flux ratios between the lensed images significantly different from what is actually observed. This suggests that the lensed images may be affected by a combination of micro or milli-lensing and dust extinction effects.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, published in A&

    A Sharp Event in the Image a Light Curve of the Double Quasar 0957+561 and Prediction of the 1996 Image B Light Curve

    Get PDF
    CCD photometry of the gravitational lens system 0957+561A,B in the g and r bands was obtained on alternate nights, weather permitting, from December 1994 through May 1995 using the Double Imaging Spectrograph (DIS) on the Apache Point Observatory (APO) 3.5-meter telescope. The remote observing and fast instrument change capabilities of this facility allowed accumulation of light curves sampled frequently and consistently. The Honeycutt ensemble photometry algorithm was applied to the data set and yielded typical relative photometric errors of approximately 0.01 magnitudes. Image A exhibited a sharp drop of about 0.1 magnitudes in late December 1994; no other strong features were recorded in either image. This event displays none of the expected generic features of a microlensing-induced flux variation and is likely to be intrinsic to the quasar; if so, it should also be seen in the B image with the lensing differential time delay. We give the expected 1996 image B light curves based on two values of the time delay and brightness ratio which have been proposed and debated in the literature. Continued monitoring of the system in the first half of 1996 should easily detect the image B event and thus resolve the time-delay controversy.Comment: submitted to ApJ Letters, 15 pages, uuencoded PostScript with figures included; also available through WWW at http://www.astro.princeton.edu/~library/prep.htm

    Discovery of a quadruply lensed quasar - The 'clover leaf' H1413 + 117

    Full text link
    The authors report the discovery of a second gravitational lens system in the broad absorption line quasar H1413+117. Four images of comparable brightness are seen, separated by â ¡1 arcsec. The unique configuration of the images, together with the fairly rare occurrence of this type of quasar, makes it incontrovertible that this is a lensed system, not a cluster of quasars. (See also 159.062)
    corecore