CWRU PAT Coffee Agenda

Tuesdays 10:30 - 11:30 | Fridays 11:30 - 12:30

+1 Line-of-sight effects in strong gravitational lensing.

gds6 +1

+1 Constraining Primordial Black Holes Based on The Dynamics of Neptune.

oxg34 +1

+1 Binary black hole system at equilibrium.

oxg34 +1

Showing votes from 2021-04-16 12:30 to 2021-04-20 11:30 | Next meeting is Friday Sep 12th, 11:30 am.

users

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astro-ph.CO

  • Line-of-sight effects in strong gravitational lensing.- [PDF] - [Article]

    Pierre Fleury, Julien Larena, Jean-Philippe Uzan
     

    While most strong-gravitational-lensing systems may be roughly modelled by a single massive object between the source and the observer, in the details all the structures near the light path contribute to the observed images. These additional contributions, known as line-of-sight effects, are non-negligible in practice. This article proposes a new theoretical framework to model the line-of-sight effects, together with very promising applications at the interface of weak and strong lensing. Our approach relies on the dominant-lens approximation, where one deflector is treated as the main lens while the others are treated as perturbations. The resulting framework is technically simpler to handle than the multi-plane lensing formalism, while allowing one to consistently model any kind of perturbation. In particular, it is not limited to the usual external-convergence and external-shear parameterisation. As a first application, we identify a specific notion of line-of-sight shear that is not degenerate with the ellipticity of the main lens, and which could thus be extracted from strong-lensing images. This result supports and improves the recent proposal that Einstein rings might be powerful probes of cosmic shear. As a second application, we investigate the distortions of strong-lensing critical curves under line-of-sight effects, and more particularly their correlations across the sky. We find that such correlations may be used to probe, not only the large-scale structure of the Universe, but also the dark-matter halo profiles of strong lenses. This last possibility would be a key asset to improve the accuracy of the measurement of the Hubble-Lema\^itre constant via time-delay cosmography.

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