Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T16:44:50.412Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Weak Lensing By Individual Galaxies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 May 2016

Tereasa G. Brainerd
Affiliation:
Department of Astronomy, Boston University, 725 Commonwealth Ave., Boston, MA 02215
Roger D. Blandford
Affiliation:
California Institute of Technology, Theoretical Astrophysics 130-33, Pasadena, CA 91125
Ian Smail
Affiliation:
Observatories of the Carnegie Institution of Washington, 813 Santa Barbara St., Pasadena, CA 91101

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

In this paper we report on an investigation of statistical weak gravitational lensing of cosmologically distant faint galaxies by foreground galaxies. The signal we seek is a distortion of the images of faint galaxies resulting in a weakly preferred tangential alignment of faint galaxies around brighter galaxies. That is, if the faint galaxies have been gravitationally lensed by the brighter systems, the major axes of their images will tend to lie perpendicular to the radius vectors joining the centroids of the faint and bright galaxies (Fig. 1). Modeling a lens galaxy as a singular isothermal sphere with circular velocity Vc, an ellipticity of ∼ 2πVc2 /c2θ is induced in the image of a source galaxy at an angular separation θ from the lens. This is of order a few percent for faint–bright galaxy pairs with separations θ ∼ 30″ where the lens is a typical bright spiral. Over 1000 pairs must be measured in order to detect such a signal in the presence of the noise associated with the intrinsic galaxy shapes. Given a sufficiently large number of pairs, it may be possible to use the variation of the induced ellipticity with θ to study the angular extent of the halos of the lens galaxies.

Type
Chapter 6: Galaxies
Copyright
Copyright © Kluwer 1996 

References

Dressler, A., et al., 1995, in preparation Google Scholar
Lilly, S., 1993, ApJ, 411, 501 Google Scholar
Mould, J., Blandford, R., Villumsen, J., Brainerd, T., Smail, I., Small, T., & Kells, W., 1994, MNRAS, 271, 31 Google Scholar
Tresse, L., Hammer, F., LeFevre, O., & Proust, D., 1993, A&A, 277, 53 Google Scholar
Tyson, J.A., Valdes, F., Jarvis, J.F., & Mills, A.P., 1984, ApJL, 281, L59 Google Scholar
Webster, R.L., 1983, , Google Scholar
Zaritsky, D. & White, S.D.M., 1994, ApJ, 435, 599 Google Scholar