4.7 Article

IMPACTS OF SOURCE PROPERTIES ON STRONG LENSING BY RICH GALAXY CLUSTERS

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 707, Issue 1, Pages 472-481

Publisher

IOP PUBLISHING LTD
DOI: 10.1088/0004-637X/707/1/472

Keywords

dark matter; galaxies: clusters: general; gravitational lensing; methods: data analysis

Funding

  1. NSFC [10533030, 10821302, 10878001]
  2. CAS [KJCX2-YW-T05]
  3. 973 Program [2007CB815402]
  4. Humboldt Foundation
  5. Royal Society
  6. Department of Energy
  7. European Community [MRTN-CT-2004-505183]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We use a high-resolution N-body simulation to investigate the influence of background galaxy properties, including redshift, size, shape, and clustering, on the efficiency of forming giant arcs by gravitational lensing of rich galaxy clusters. Two large sets of ray-tracing simulations are carried out for 10 massive clusters at two redshifts, i.e., z(l) similar to 0.2 and 0.3. The virial mass (M-vir) of the simulated lens clusters at z similar to 0.2 ranges from 6.8 x 10(14) h(-1) M-circle dot to 1.1 x 10(15) h(-1) M-circle dot. The information of background galaxies brighter than 25 mag in the I-band is taken from the Cosmological Evolution Survey (COSMOS) imaging data. Around 1.7 x 10(5) strong lensing realizations with these images as background galaxies have been performed for each set. We find that the efficiency for forming giant arcs for z(l) = 0.2 clusters is broadly consistent with observations. Our study on control source samples shows that the number of giant arcs is decreased by a factor of 1.05 and 1.61 when the COSMOS redshift distribution of galaxies is adopted, compared to the cases where all the galaxies were assumed to be in a single source plane at z(l) = 1.0 and z(l) = 1.5, respectively. We find that the efficiency of producing giant arcs by rich clusters is weakly dependent on the source size and clustering. Our principal finding is that a small proportion (similar to 1/3) of galaxies with elongated shapes (e.g., ellipticity epsilon = 1 - b/a > 0.5) can boost the number of giant arcs substantially. Compared with recent studies where a uniform ellipticity distribution from 0 to 0.5 is used for the sources, the adoption of directly observed shape distribution increases the number of giant arcs by a factor of similar to 2. Our results indicate that it is necessary to account for source information and survey parameters (such as point-spread function, seeing) to make correct predictions of giant arcs and further to constrain the cosmological parameters.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available