1,984 research outputs found

    The Chandra view of the Largest Quasar Lens SDSS J1029+2623

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    We present results from Chandra observations of the cluster lens SDSS J1029+2623 at z_l=0.58, which is a gravitationally lensed quasar with the largest known image separation. We clearly detect X-ray emission both from the lensing cluster and the three lensed quasar images. The cluster has an X-ray temperature of kT = 8.1 (+2.0, -1.2) keV and bolometric luminosity of L_X = 9.6e44 erg s^-1. Its surface brightness is centered near one of the brightest cluster galaxies, and it is elongated East-West. We identify a subpeak North-West of the main peak, which is suggestive of an ongoing merger. Even so, the X-ray mass inferred from the hydrostatic equilibrium assumption appears to be consistent with the lensing mass from the Einstein radius of the system. We find significant absorption in the soft X-ray spectrum of the faintest quasar image, which can be caused by an intervening material at either the lens or source redshift. The X-ray flux ratios between the quasar images (after correcting for absorption) are in reasonable agreement with those at optical and radio wavelengths, and all the flux ratios are inconsistent with those predicted by simple mass models. This implies that microlensing effect is not significant for this system and dark matter substructure is mainly responsible for the anomalous flux ratios.Comment: 35 pages, 8 figures. Accepted for publication in Ap

    Perturbation Study of the Conductance through an Interacting Region Connected to Multi-Mode Leads

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    We study the effects of electron correlation on transport through an interacting region connected to multi-mode leads based on the perturbation expansion with respect to the inter-electron interaction. At zero temperature the conductance defined in the Kubo formalism can be written in terms of a single-particle Green's function at the Fermi energy, and it can be mapped onto a transmission coefficient of the free quasiparticles described by an effective Hamiltonian. We apply this formulation to a two-dimensional Hubbard model of finite size connected to two noninteracting leads. We calculate the conductance in the electron-hole symmetric case using the order U2U^2 self-energy. The conductance shows several maximums in the UU dependence in some parameter regions of ty/txt_y/t_x, where txt_x (tyt_y) is the hopping matrix element in the xx- (yy-) directions. This is caused by the resonance occurring in some of the subbands, and is related with the UU dependence of the eigenvalues of the effective Hamiltonian.Comment: 17 pages, 12 figures, to be published in J.Phys.Soc.Jpn. 71(2002)No.

    Combining cluster observables and stacked weak lensing to probe dark energy: Self-calibration of systematic uncertainties

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    We develop a new method of combining cluster observables (number counts and cluster-cluster correlation functions) and stacked weak lensing signals of background galaxy shapes, both of which are available in a wide-field optical imaging survey. Assuming that the clusters have secure redshift estimates, we show that the joint experiment enables a self-calibration of important systematic errors including the source redshift uncertainty and the cluster mass-observable relation, by adopting a single population of background source galaxies for the lensing analysis. It allows us to use the relative strengths of stacked lensing signals at different cluster redshifts for calibrating the source redshift uncertainty, which in turn leads to accurate measurements of the mean cluster mass in each bin. In addition, our formulation of stacked lensing signals in Fourier space simplifies the Fisher matrix calculations, as well as the marginalization over the cluster off-centering effect, the most significant uncertainty in stacked lensing. We show that upcoming wide-field surveys yield stringent constraints on cosmological parameters including dark energy parameters, without any priors on nuisance parameters that model systematic uncertainties. Specifically, the stacked lensing information improves the dark energy FoM by a factor of 4, compared to that from the cluster observables alone. The primordial non-Gaussianity parameter can also be constrained with a level of f_NL~10. In this method, the mean source redshift is well calibrated to an accuracy of 0.1 in redshift, and the mean cluster mass in each bin to 5-10% accuracies, which demonstrates the success of the self-calibration of systematic uncertainties from the joint experiment. (Abridged)Comment: 29 pages, 17 figures, 6 tables, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev.

    Transport through a finite Hubbard chain connected to reservoirs

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    The dc conductance through a finite Hubbard chain of size N coupled to two noninteracting leads is studied at T = 0 in an electron-hole symmetric case. Assuming that the perturbation expansion in U is valid for small N (=1,2,3,...) owing to the presence of the noninteracting leads, we obtain the self-energy at \omega = 0 analytically in the real space within the second order in U. Then, we calculate the inter-site Green's function which connects the two boundaries of the chain, G_{N1}, solving the Dyson equation. The conductance can be obtained through G_{N1}, and the result shows an oscillatory behavior as a function of N. For odd N, a perfect transmission occurs independent of U. This is due to the inversion and electron-hole symmetries, and is attributed to a Kondo resonance appearing at the Fermi level. On the other hand, for even N, the conductance is a decreasing function of N and U.Comment: 11 pages, RevTeX, 6 figures, to be published in Phys. Rev. B 59 (1999

    A Two-Year Time Delay for the Lensed Quasar SDSS J1029+2623

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    We present 279 epochs of optical monitoring data spanning 5.4 years from 2007 January to 2012 June for the largest image separation (22.6 arcsec) gravitationally lensed quasar, SDSS J1029+2623. We find that image A leads the images B and C by dt_AB = (744+-10) days (90% confidence); the uncertainty includes both statistical uncertainties and systematic differences due to the choice of models. With only a ~1% fractional error, the interpretation of the delay is limited primarily by cosmic variance due to fluctuations in the mean line-of-sight density. We cannot separate the fainter image C from image B, but since image C trails image B by only 2-3 days in all models, the estimate of the time delay between image A and B is little affected by combining the fluxes of images B and C. There is weak evidence for a low level of microlensing, perhaps created by the small galaxy responsible for the flux ratio anomaly in this system. Interpreting the delay depends on better constraining the shape of the gravitational potential using the lensed host galaxy, other lensed arcs and the structure of the X-ray emission.Comment: Accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal. Changes in response to referee's comment

    Determination of the phase shifts for interacting electrons connected to reservoirs

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    We describe a formulation to deduce the phase shifts, which determine the ground-state properties of interacting quantum-dot systems with the inversion symmetry, from the fixed-point eigenvalues of the numerical renormalization group (NRG). Our approach does not assume the specific form of the Hamiltonian nor the electron-hole symmetry, and it is applicable to a wide class of quantum impurities connected to noninteracting leads. We apply the method to a triple dot which is described by a three-site Hubbard chain connected to two noninteracting leads, and calculate the dc conductance away from half-filling. The conductance shows the typical Kondo plateaus of Unitary limit in some regions of the gate voltages, at which the total number of electrons N_el in the three dots is odd, i.e., N_el =1, 3 and 5. In contrast, the conductance shows a wide minimum in the gate voltages corresponding to even number of electrons, N_el = 2 and 4. We also discuss the parallel conductance of the triple dot connected transversely to four leads, and show that it can be deduced from the two phase shifts defined in the two-lead case.Comment: 9 pages, 12 figures: Fig. 12 has been added to discuss T_

    Constraints on the Baryonic Compression and Implications for the Fraction of Dark Halo Lenses

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    We predict the fraction of dark halo lenses, that is, the fraction of lens systems produced by the gravitational potential of dark halos, on the basis of a simple parametric model of baryonic compression. The fraction of dark halo lenses primarily contains information on the effect of baryonic compression and the density profile of dark halos, and is expected to be insensitive to cosmological parameters and source population. The model we adopt comprises the galaxy formation probability p_g(M) which describes the global efficiency of baryonic compression and the ratio of circular velocities of galaxies to virial velocities of dark halos gamma_v=v_c/v_{vir} which means how the inner structure of dark halos is modified due to baryonic compression. The model parameters are constrained from the velocity function of galaxies and the distribution of image separations in gravitational lensing, although the degeneracy between model parameters still remains. We show that the fraction of dark halo lenses depends strongly on gamma_v and the density profile of dark halos such as inner slope alpha. This means that the observation of the fraction of dark halos can break the degeneracy between model parameters if the density profile of dark halo lenses is fully settled. On the other hand, by restricting gamma_v to physically plausible range we can predict the lower limit of the fraction of dark halo lenses on the basis of our model. Our result indicates that steeper inner cusps of dark halos (alpha >~ 1.5) or too centrally concentrated dark halos are inconsistent with the lack of dark halo lenses in observations.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, emulateapj5, accepted for publication in Ap
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