2,159 research outputs found
An optimal filter for the detection of galaxy clusters through weak lensing
We construct a linear filter optimised for detecting dark-matter halos in
weak-lensing data. The filter assumes a mean radial profile of the halo shear
pattern and modifies that shape by the noise power spectrum. Aiming at
separating dark-matter halos from spurious peaks caused by large-scale
structure lensing, we model the noise as being composed of weak lensing by
large-scale structures and Poisson noise from random galaxy positions and
intrinsic ellipticities. Optimal filtering against the noise requires the
optimal filter scale to be smaller than typical halo sizes. Although a perfect
separation of halos from spurious large-scale structure peaks is strictly
impossible, we use numerical simulations to demonstrate that our filter
produces substantially more sensitive, reliable and stable results than the
conventionally used aperture-mass statistic.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, A&A submitte
Arc sensitivity to cluster ellipticity, asymmetries and substructures
We investigate how ellipticity, asymmetries and substructures separately
affect the ability of galaxy clusters to produce strong lensing events, i.e.
gravitational arcs, and how they influence the arc morphologies and fluxes.
This is important for those studies aiming, for example, at constraining
cosmological parameters from statistical lensing, or at determining the inner
structure of galaxy clusters through gravitational arcs. We do so by creating
two-dimensional gradually smoothed, differently elliptical and asymmetric
versions of some numerical models. On average, we find that the contributions
of ellipticity, asymmetries and substructures amount to ~40%, ~10% and ~30% of
the total strong lensing cross section, respectively. However, our analysis
shows that substructures play a more important role in less elliptical and
asymmetric clusters, even if located at large distances from the cluster
centers (~1Mpc/h). Conversely, their effect is less important in highly
asymmetric lenses. The morphology, position and flux of individual arcs are
strongly affected by the presence of substructures in the clusters. Removing
substructures on spatial scales <~50kpc/h, roughly corresponding to mass scales
<~5 10^{10}M_\odot/h, alters the image multiplicity of ~35% of the sources used
in the simulations and causes position shifts larger than 5'' for ~40% of the
arcs longer than 5''. We conclude that any model for cluster lens cannot
neglect the effects of ellipticity, asymmetries and substructures. On the other
hand, the high sensitivity of gravitational arcs to deviations from regular,
smooth and symmetric mass distributions suggests that strong gravitational
lensing is potentially a powerfull tool to measure the level of substructures
and asymmetries in clusters.Comment: 16 pages, 18 figures. Accepted version. Version with full resolution
images can be found at
http://www.ita.uni-heidelberg.de/~massimo/sub/publications.htm
Cosmic reionization in a dynamic quintessence cosmology
In this paper we investigate the effects that a dynamic dark energy component
dominant in the universe at late epochs has on reionization. We follow the
evolution of HII regions with the analytic approach of Furlanetto and Oh (2005)
in two different universes for which we assume the Peebles and Ratra (2003) and
Brax and Martin (2000) quintessence models and we compare our results to the
LCDM scenario. We show that, for a fixed ionization efficiency, at the same
cosmological epoch the topology of bubbles is dominated by high-mass objects
and the characteristic size of the ionized regions is slightly smaller than in
the LCDM model, especially at the latest stages of reionization, due to the
higher recombination efficiency. As a consequence, the bubbles' `epoch of
overlap' happens earlier than in LCDM. Finally, we show how the different
evolution of the HII regions affects the transmission of the high-z QSO
spectra, reducing the Lyman flux absorption at small optical depths.Comment: 10 pages, minor changes to match the version accepted for publication
by MNRA
Strong lensing in the MareNostrum Universe II: scaling relations and optical depths
The strong lensing events that are observed in compact clusters of galaxies
can, both statistically and individually, return important clues about the
structural properties of the most massive structures in the Universe.
Substantial work is ongoing in order to understand the degree of similarity
between the lensing cluster population and the population of clusters as a
whole, with members of the former being likely more massive, compact, and
substructured than members of the latter. In this work we exploit synthetic
clusters extracted from the {\sc MareNostrum Universe} cosmological simulation
in order to estimate the correlation between the strong lensing efficiency and
other bulk properties of lensing clusters, such as the virial mass and the
bolometric X-ray luminosity. We found that a positive correlation exist between
all these quantities, with the substantial scatter being smaller for the
luminosity-cross section relation. We additionally used the relation between
the lensing efficiency and the virial mass in order to construct a synthetic
optical depth that agrees well with the true one, while being extremely faster
to be evaluated. We finally estimated what fraction of the total giant arc
abundance is recovered when galaxy clusters are selected according to their
dynamical activity or their X-ray luminosity. Our results show that there is a
high probability for high-redshift strong lensing clusters to be substantially
far away from dynamical equilibrium, and that of the total amount of
giant arcs are lost if looking only at very X-ray luminous objects.Comment: 15 pages, 10 figures. Accepted by A&
Comparison of an X-ray selected sample of massive lensing clusters with the MareNostrum Universe LCDM simulation
A long-standing problem of strong lensing by galaxy clusters regards the
observed high rate of giant gravitational arcs as compared to the predictions
in the framework of the "standard" cosmological model. Recently, few other
inconsistencies between theoretical expectations and observations have been
claimed which regard the large size of the Einstein rings and the high
concentrations of few clusters with strong lensing features. All of these
problems consistently indicate that observed galaxy clusters may be
gravitational lenses stronger than expected. We use clusters extracted from the
MareNostrum Universe to build up mock catalogs of galaxy clusters selected
through their X-ray flux. We use these objects to estimate the probability
distributions of lensing cross sections, Einstein rings, and concentrations for
the sample of 12 MACS clusters at presented in Ebeling et al. (2007)
and discussed in Zitrin et al. (2010). We find that simulated clusters produce
less arcs than observed clusters do. The medians of the
distributions of the Einstein ring sizes differ by between
simulations and observations. We estimate that, due to cluster triaxiality and
orientation biases affecting the lenses with the largest cross sections, the
concentrations of the individual MACS clusters inferred from the lensing
analysis should be up to a factor of larger than expected from the
CDM model. The arc statistics, the Einstein ring, and the
concentration problems in strong lensing clusters are mitigated but not solved
on the basis of our analysis. Nevertheless, due to the lack of redshifts for
most of the multiple image systems used for modeling the MACS clusters, the
results of this work will need to be verified with additional data. The
upcoming CLASH program will provide an ideal sample for extending our
comparison (abridged).Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication on A&
Searching dark-matter halos in the GaBoDS survey
We apply the linear filter for the weak-lensing signal of dark-matter halos
developed in Maturi et al. (2005) to the cosmic-shear data extracted from the
Garching-Bonn-Deep-Survey (GaBoDS). We wish to search for dark-matter halos
through weak-lensing signatures which are significantly above the random and
systematic noise level caused by intervening large-scale structures. We employ
a linear matched filter which maximises the signal-to-noise ratio by minimising
the number of spurious detections caused by the superposition of large-scale
structures (LSS). This is achieved by suppressing those spatial frequencies
dominated by the LSS contamination. We confirm the improved stability and
reliability of the detections achieved with our new filter compared to the
commonly-used aperture mass (Schneider, 1996; Schneider et al., 1998) and to
the aperture mass based on the shear profile expected for NFW haloes (see e.g.
Schirmer et al., 2004; Hennawi & Spergel, 2005). Schirmer et al.~(2006)
achieved results comparable to our filter, but probably only because of the low
average redshift of the background sources in GaBoDS, which keeps the LSS
contamination low. For deeper data, the difference will be more important, as
shown by Maturi et al. (2005). We detect fourteen halos on about eighteen
square degrees selected from the survey. Five are known clusters, two are
associated with over-densities of galaxies visible in the GaBoDS image, and
seven have no known optical or X-ray counterparts.Comment: 8 pages, 4 figures, accepted by A&
Strong lensing in the MareNostrum Universe: biases in the cluster lens population
Strong lensing is one of the most direct probes of the mass distribution in
the inner regions of galaxy clusters. It can be used to constrain the density
profiles and to measure the mass of the lenses. Moreover, the abundance of
strong lensing events can be used to constrain the structure formation and the
cosmological parameters through the so-called "arc-statistics" approach.
However, several issues related to the usage of strong lensing clusters in
cosmological applications are still controversial, leading to the suspect that
several biases may affect this very peculiar class of objects. With this study
we aim at better understanding the properties of galaxy clusters which can
potentially act as strong lenses. We do so by investigating the properties of a
large sample of galaxy clusters extracted from the N-body/hydrodynamical
simulation MareNostrum Universe. We explore the correlation between the cross
section for lensing and many properties of clusters, like the mass, the
three-dimensional and projected shapes, their concentrations, the X-ray
luminosity and the dynamical activity. We find that the probability of strong
alignments between the major axes of the lenses and the line of sight is a
growing function of the lensing cross section. In projection, the strong lenses
appear rounder within R200, but we find that their cores tend to be more
elliptical as the lensing cross section increases. We also find that the
cluster concentrations estimated from the projected density profiles tend to be
biased high. The X-ray luminosity of strong lensing clusters is higher than
that of normal lenses of similar mass and redshift. This is particular
significant for the least massive lenses. Finally, we find that the strongest
lenses generally exhibit an excess of kinetic energy within the virial radius,
indicating that they are more dynamically active than usual clusters.Comment: 22 pages, 18 figures, accepted for publication on A&
Selecting background galaxies in weak-lensing analysis of galaxy clusters
In this paper, we present a new method to select the faint, background
galaxies used to derive the mass of galaxy clusters by weak lensing.
The method is based on the simultaneous analysis of the shear signal, that
should be consistent with zero for the foreground, unlensed galaxies, and of
the colors of the galaxies: photometric data from the COSMic evOlution Survey
are used to train the color selection. In order to validate this methodology,
we test it against a set of state-of-the-art image simulations of mock galaxy
clusters in different redshift [] and mass
[] ranges, mimicking medium-deep multicolor
imaging observations (e.g. SUBARU, LBT).
The performance of our method in terms of contamination by unlensed sources
is comparable to a selection based on photometric redshifts, which however
requires a good spectral coverage and is thus much more observationally
demanding. The application of our method to simulations gives an average ratio
between estimated and true masses of . As a further test,
we finally apply our method to real data, and compare our results with other
weak lensing mass estimates in the literature: for this purpose we choose the
cluster Abell 2219 (), for which multi-band (BVRi) data are publicly
available.Comment: MNRAS, Accepted 2016 February 2
Age-related differences in pointing accuracy in familiar and unfamiliar environments
This study aimed to investigate age-related differences in spatial mental representations of familiar and unfamiliar places. Nineteen young adults (aged 18\u201323) and 19 older adults (aged 60\u201374), all living in the same Italian town, completed a set of visuospatial measures and then pointed in the direction of familiar landmarks in their town and in the direction of landmarks in an unknown environment studied on a map. Results showed that older adults were less accurate in the visuospatial tasks and in pointing at landmarks in an unfamiliar environment, but performed as well as the young adults when pointing to familiar places. Pointing performance correlated with visuospatial tests accuracy in both familiar and unfamiliar environments, while only pointing in an unknown environment correlated with visuospatial working memory (VSWM).
The spatial representation of well-known places seems to be well preserved in older adults (just as well as in young adults), while it declines for unfamiliar environments. Spatial abilities sustain the mental representations of both familiar and unfamiliar environments, while the support of VSWM resources is only needed for the latter
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