The Effects of Massive Substructures on Image Multiplicities in Gravitati onal Lenses
read the original abstract
Surveys for gravitational lens systems have typically found a significantly larger fraction of lenses with four (or more) images than are predicted by standard ellipsoidal lens models (50% versus 25-30%). We show that including the effects of smaller satellite galaxies, with an abundance normalized by the observations, significantly increases the expected number of systems with more than two images and largely explains the discrepancy. The effect is dominated by satellites with ~20% the luminosity of the primary lens, in rough agreement with the typical luminosities of the observed satellites. We find that the lens systems with satellites cannot, however, be dropped from estimates of the cosmological model based on gravitational lens statistics without significantly biasing the results.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
Forward citations
Cited by 1 Pith paper
-
Probing Dark Matter Substructure with Image Number Anomaly in Strong Lensing Systems
Null detection of extra lensed images in 3500 mock systems constrains PBH abundance to ≲0.04-0.125% and excludes FDM masses below 0.4-3.5×10^{-22} eV at 95% CL depending on angular resolution.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.