4.6 Article

The strongest gravitational lenses I. The statistical impact of cluster mergers

Journal

ASTRONOMY & ASTROPHYSICS
Volume 547, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A
DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201219722

Keywords

cosmology: theory; gravitational lensing: strong; galaxies: clusters: general; methods: statistical

Funding

  1. Baden-Wurttemberg Stiftung
  2. ASI-Uni Bologna-Astronomy Dept. Euclid-NIS [I/039/10/0]
  3. PRIN MIUR
  4. University of Florida
  5. Transregional Collaborative Research Centre TR 33 The Dark Universe of the German Science Foundation
  6. [ASI-INAF I/023/05/0]
  7. [ASI-INAF I/088/06/0]
  8. [ASI I/016/07/0 COFIS]
  9. [ASI Euclid-DUNE I/064/08/0]

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For more than a decade now, it has been controversial whether or not the high rate of giant gravitational arcs and the largest observed Einstein radii are consistent with the standard cosmological model. Recent studies indicate that mergers provide an efficient mechanism to substantially increase the strong-lensing efficiency of individual clusters. Based on purely semi-analytic methods, we investigated the statistical impact of cluster mergers on the distribution of the largest Einstein radii and the optical depth for giant gravitational arcs of selected cluster samples. Analysing representative all-sky realizations of clusters at redshifts z < 1 and assuming a constant source redshift of z(s) = 2 : 0, we find that mergers increase the number of Einstein radii above 10 '' (20 '') by similar to 35% (similar to 55%). Exploiting the tight correlation between Einstein radii and lensing cross sections, we infer that the optical depth for giant gravitational arcs with a length-to-width ratio >= 7.5 of those clusters with Einstein radii above 10 '' (20 '') increases by similar to 45% (similar to 85%). Our findings suggest that cluster mergers significantly influence in particular the statistical lensing properties of the strongest gravitational lenses. We conclude that semi-analytic studies must inevitably take these events into account before questioning the standard cosmological model on the basis of the largest observed Einstein radii and the statistics of giant gravitational arcs.

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