405 research outputs found
The Mass Distribution of SDSS J1004+4112 Revisited
We present a strong lens analysis of SDSS J1004+4112, a unique quasar lens
produced by a massive cluster of galaxies at z=0.68, using a newly developed
software for gravitational lensing. We find that our parametric mass model well
reproduces all observations including the positions of quasar images as well as
those of multiply imaged galaxies with measured spectroscopic redshifts, time
delays between quasar images, and the positions of faint central images. The
predicted large total magnification of \mu ~ 70 suggests that the lens system
is indeed a useful site for studying the fine structure of a distant quasar and
its host galaxy. The dark halo component is found to be unimodal centered on
the brightest cluster galaxy and the Chandra X-ray surface brightness profile.
In addition, the orientation of the halo component is quite consistent with
those of the brightest cluster galaxy and member galaxy distribution, implying
that the lensing cluster is a relaxed system. The radial profile of the
best-fit mass model is in good agreement with a mass profile inferred from the
X-ray observation. While the inner radial slope of the dark halo component is
consistent with being -1, a clear dependence of the predicted A-D time delay on
the slope indicates that an additional time delay measurement will improve
constraints on the mass model.Comment: 9 pages, 5 figures, accepted for publication in PASJ. The lens
software presented in the paper available at
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/~oguri/glafic
Is There a Quad Problem among Optical Gravitational Lenses?
Most of optical gravitational lenses recently discovered in the Sloan Digital
Sky Survey Quasar Lens Search (SQLS) have two-images rather than four-images,
in marked contrast to radio lenses for which the fraction of four-image lenses
(quad fraction) is quite high. We revisit the quad fraction among optical
lenses by taking the selection function of the SQLS into account. We find that
the current observed quad fraction in the SQLS is indeed lower than, but
consistent with, the prediction of our theoretical model. The low quad fraction
among optical lenses, together with the high quad fraction among radio lenses,
implies that the quasar optical luminosity function has a relatively shallow
faint end slope.Comment: 9 pages, 4 figures, invited contribution to appear in New Journal of
Physics (Focus on Gravitational Lensing
Self-Calibrated Cluster Counts as a Probe of Primordial Non-Gaussianity
We show that the ability to probe primordial non-Gaussianity with cluster
counts is drastically improved by adding the excess variance of counts which
contains information on the clustering. The conflicting dependences of changing
the mass threshold and including primordial non-Gaussianity on the mass
function and biasing indicate that the self-calibrated cluster counts well
break the degeneracy between primordial non-Gaussianity and the observable-mass
relation. Based on the Fisher matrix analysis, we show that the count variance
improves constraints on f_NL by more than an order of magnitude. It exhibits
little degeneracy with dark energy equation of state. We forecast that upcoming
Hyper Suprime-cam cluster surveys and Dark Energy Survey will constrain
primordial non-Gaussianity at the level \sigma(f_NL) \sim 8, which is
competitive with forecasted constraints from next-generation cosmic microwave
background experiments.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in PR
Lens Galaxy Environments and Anomalous Flux Ratios in Gravitational Lenses
The fraction of substructures required to account for anomalous flux ratios
in gravitational lens systems appears to be higher than that predicted in the
standard cold dark matter cosmology. We present a possible alternative route to
anomalous flux ratios from lens galaxy environments. We consider the compound
lens system such that a lens galaxy lie in a group or cluster, and estimate the
contribution of substructures in the group/cluster to the fraction using an
analytic model of substructures. We find that the contribution becomes dominant
when the impact parameter of the lens is less than ~30% of the virial radius of
the group/cluster. This indicates that the environmental effect can partly
explain the high incidence of anomalous flux ratios.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figures, accepted for publication in MNRAS Letter
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