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Showing papers by "Simon Dye published in 1998"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The first application of lens magnification to measure the absolute mass of a galaxy cluster was presented in this article, where the authors presented the first maps of the total mass distribution in Abell 1689, measured from the deficit of lensed red galaxies behind the cluster.
Abstract: We present the first application of lens magnification to measure the absolute mass of a galaxy cluster: Abell 1689. The absolute mass of a galaxy cluster can be measured by the gravitational lens magnification of a background galaxy population by the cluster gravitational potential. The lensing signal is complicated by the intrinsic variation in number counts resulting from galaxy clustering and shot noise and by additional uncertainties in relating magnification to mass in the strong lensing regime. Clustering and shot noise can be dealt with using maximum likelihood methods. Local approximations can then be used to estimate the mass from magnification. Alternatively, if the lens is axially symmetric we show that the amplification equation can be solved nonlocally for the surface mass density and the tangential shear. In this paper we present the first maps of the total mass distribution in Abell 1689, measured from the deficit of lensed red galaxies behind the cluster. Although noisier, these reproduce the main features of mass maps made using the shear distortion of background galaxies, but have the correct normalization, finally breaking the "sheet-mass" degeneracy that has plagued lensing methods based on shear. Averaging over annular bins centered on the peak of the light distribution, we derive the cluster mass profile in the inner 4' (0.48 h-1 Mpc). These show a profile with a near-isothermal surface mass density κ ≈ (0.5 ± 0.1)(θ/1')-1 out to a radius of 24 (0.28 h-1 Mpc), followed by a sudden drop into noise. We find that the projected mass interior to 0.24 h-1 Mpc is M(<0.24 h-1 Mpc) = (0.50 ± 0.09) × 1015 h-1 M☉. We compare our results to masses estimated from X-ray temperatures and line-of-sight velocity dispersions, as well as to weak shear and lensing arclets. We find that the masses inferred from X-ray, line-of-sight velocity dispersions, arclets, and weak shear are all in fair agreement for Abell 1689.

96 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The first application of lens magnification to measure the absolute mass of a galaxy cluster; Abell 1689 was presented in this article, where the authors presented the first maps of the total mass distribution of the galaxy cluster, measured from the deficit of lensed red galaxies behind the cluster, and showed that the projected mass interior to 0.24 h^{-1}$Mpc is M(<0.50+/- 0.09)
Abstract: We present the first application of lens magnification to measure the absolute mass of a galaxy cluster; Abell 1689. The absolute mass of a galaxy cluster can be measured by the gravitational lens magnification of a background galaxy population by the cluster potential. The lensing signal is complicated by the variation in number counts due to galaxy clustering and shot-noise, and by additional uncertainties in relating magnification to mass in the strong lensing regime. Clustering and shot-noise can be dealt with using maximum likelihood methods. Local approximations can then be used to estimate the mass from magnification. Alternatively if the lens is axially symmetric we show that the amplification equation can be solved nonlocally for the surface mass density and the tangential shear. In this paper we present the first maps of the total mass distribution in Abell 1689, measured from the deficit of lensed red galaxies behind the cluster. Although noisier, these reproduce the main features of mass maps made using the shear distortion of background galaxies but have the correct normalisation, finally breaking the ``sheet-mass'' degeneracy that has plagued lensing methods based on shear. We derive the cluster mass profile in the inner 4' (0.48 Mpc/h). These show a profile with a near isothermal surface mass density \kappa = (0.5+/-0.1)(\theta/1')^{-1} out to a radius of 2.4' (0.28Mpc/h), followed by a sudden drop into noise. We find that the projected mass interior to 0.24 h^{-1}$Mpc is M(<0.24 Mpc/h)=(0.50+/- 0.09) \times 10^{15} Msol/h. We compare our results with masses estimated from X-ray temperatures and line-of-sight velocity dispersions, as well as weak shear and lensing arclets and find all are in fair agreement for Abell 1698.

91 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a method for determining accurate, self-consistent cluster lens mass and shear maps in the strong lensing regime from the magnification bias of background galaxies is presented.
Abstract: We present a new method for directly determining accurate, self-consistent cluster lens mass and shear maps in the strong lensing regime from the magnification bias of background galaxies. The method relies upon pixellization of the surface mass density distribution which allows us to write down a simple, solvable set of equations. We also show how pixellization can be applied to methods of mass determination from measurements of shear and present a simplified method of application. The method is demonstrated with cluster models and applied to magnification data from the lensing cluster Abell 1689.

6 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the absolute mass of a cluster can be measured by the gravitational lens magnification of a background galaxy population, and the first application of this method to measure mass in the cluster Abell 1689, taking into account the uncertainties introduced by intrinsic clustering of the background galaxies, shot-noise and the effects of strong magnification near the cluster center.

2 citations