4.7 Article

Halo concentration strengthens dark matter constraints in galaxy-galaxy strong lensing analyses

Journal

MONTHLY NOTICES OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 510, Issue 2, Pages 2464-2479

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/mnras/stab3527

Keywords

gravitational lensing: strong; dark matter

Funding

  1. STFC/UKRI Ernest Rutherford Fellowship [ST/S00499811]
  2. UKSA [STiv001582/1, STri002565/1]
  3. Royal Society
  4. European Research Council Horizon 2020 grant 'EWC' [AMD-776247-6]
  5. European Research Council (ERC) through Advanced Investigator grant [786910]
  6. National Natural Science Foundation of China [11773032, 12022306]
  7. BIS National E -infrastructure capital grant [ST/K00042X/1]
  8. STFC capital grants [ST/H008519/1, ST/K00087X/1]
  9. STFC DiRAC Operations grant [ST/K003267/1]
  10. Durham University
  11. European Research Council (ERC) [786910] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This article investigates the detectability of low-mass dark matter haloes in warm dark matter models. The authors find that haloes are harder to detect when they are either behind or in front of the lens. Furthermore, the perturbing effect of haloes increases with their concentration, and accounting for the scatter in the mass-concentration relation can significantly boost the expected number of detections.
A defining prediction of the cold dark matter cosmological model is the existence of a very large population of low-mass haloes. This population is absent in models in which the dark matter particle is warm (WDM). These alternatives can, in principle, be distinguished observationally because haloes along the line of sight can perturb galaxy-galaxy strong gravitational lenses. Furthermore, the WDM particle mass could be deduced because the cut-off in their halo mass function depends on the mass of the particle. We systematically explore the detectability of low-mass haloes in WDM models by simulating and fitting mock lensed images. Contrary to previous studies, we find that haloes are harder to detect when they are either behind or in front of the lens. Furthermore, we find that the perturbing effect of haloes increases with their concentration: Detectable haloes are systematically high-concentration haloes, and accounting for the scatter in the mass-concentration relation boosts the expected number of detections by as much as an order of magnitude. Haloes have lower concentration for lower particle masses and this further suppresses the number of detectable haloes beyond the reduction arising from the lower halo abundances alone. Taking these effects into account can make lensing constraints on the value of the mass function cut-off at least an order of magnitude more stringent than previously appreciated.

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