4.7 Article

Lensing properties of cored galaxy models

Journal

ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL
Volume 575, Issue 1, Pages 68-86

Publisher

UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/341214

Keywords

galaxies : halos; galaxies : kinematics and dynamics; galaxies : structure; gravitational lensing

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A method is developed to evaluate the magnifications of the images of galaxies with lensing potentials stratified on similar concentric ellipses. In a quadruplet system, there are two even-parity images and two odd-parity images, together with a demagnified and usually missing central image. A simple contour integral is provided which enables the sums of the magnifications of the even-parity or the odd-parity images or the central image to be separately calculated without explicit solution of the lens equation. We find that the sums for pairs of images generally vary considerably with the position of the source, while the signed sums of the two pairs can be remarkably uniform inside the tangential caustic in the absence of naked cusps. For a family of models in which the lensing potential is a power law of the elliptic radius, psi proportional to (a(2) + x(2) + y(2)q(-2))(beta/2), the number of visible images is found as a function of flattening q, external shear gamma, and core radius a. The magnification of the central image depends on the size of the core and the slope beta of the gravitational potential. It grows strongly with the source offset if beta > 1, but weakly if beta < 1. For typical source and lens redshifts, the missing central image leads to strong constraints; the slope β must be ≲ 1 and the core radius a must be ≲ 300 pc. The mass distribution in the lensing galaxy population must be nearly cusped, and the cusp must be isothermal or stronger. This is in good accord with the cuspy cores seen in high-resolution photometry of nearby, massive, early-type galaxies, which typically have β ≈ 7 (or surface density falling as distance(-1.3)) outside a break radius of a few hundred parsecs. Cuspy cores by themselves can provide the explanation of the missing central images. Dark matter at large radii may alter the slope of the projected density; however, provided the slope remains isothermal or steeper and the break radius remains small, then the central image remains unobservable. The sensitivity of the radio maps must be increased fifty-fold to find the central images in abundance.

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