Joint Astrophysics Colloquium
Strong Lensing by Optically-Selected Galaxy Clusters
Mike Gladders
Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics University
of Chicago
Gravitational lensing by galaxy clusters was predicted in the 1930s,
and finally discovered in 1986. Since these initial discoveries, several
dozen significant cluster lenses have been discovered in a variety of ways.
Lensing clusters probe the distribution of massive haloes in the universe;
the expected arc production frequency can be predicted from simulations
and compared to existing data. Massive lensing clusters act as 'natural
telescopes', providing highly magnified images of background sources which
cannot otherwise be studied using the current generation of telescopes. The
details of the observed lensing in clusters also probes the internal
properties of these massive haloes. Most cluster strong lens studies to
date have been rather limited by the small number and heterogeneous nature
of the sample of known lenses (most of which are one-off discoveries). I
will report on efforts to take the study of strong lensing clusters to
a new statistical regime, by identifying and studying two new samples of
strong lenses within large catalogs of optically selected galaxy clusters
from the RCS-2 and SDSS surveys. In total we expect to find hundreds of
new giant arcs. These efforts are now approximately half-complete; in this
mid-course report I will report on some of the spectacular successes of
these studies, and the remaining challenges. Time permitting, I will also
discuss a recently commissioned instrument at the Magellan telescopes which
was designed specifically for studying these new lens samples.
Tuesday, February 26th 2008, 16:00
Ernest Rutherford Physics Building, R.E. Bell Conference Room (room 103)
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