Atsunori Yonehara (Univ. Tsukuba, JSPS Fellow) with Hiroyuki Hirashita & Phillip Richter.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Exploring the line-of-sight environment to a quasar with Gemini/GMOS. Matthew Whiting (UNSW) Rachel Webster (U. Melbourne) Paul Francis (ANU)
Advertisements

Week 10 Dark Matter Reading: Dark Matter: 16.1, 16.5d (4 pages)
Dark energy workshop Copenhagen Aug Why the SNLS ? Questions to be addressed: -Can the intrinsic scatter in the Hubble diagram be further reduced?
Digging into the past: Galaxies at redshift z=10 Ioana Duţan.
P.Tisserand Rencontres du Vietnam Final results on galactic dark matter from the EROS-2 microlensing survey ~ images processed - 55 million.
Mapping HI absorption at z=0.026 against a resolved background CSO Andy Biggs, Martin Zwaan, Jochen Liske European Southern Observatory Frank Briggs Australian.
Color Anomaly in Multiple Quasars - Dust Inhomogeneity or Quasar Microlensing - Atsunori Yonehara (Univ. Tsukuba) with Hiroyuki Hirashita (Nagoya Univ.)
On the origin of color anomaly between multiple images of lensed quasars Atsunori Yonehara (Univ. Tokyo, Inoue Fellow) (Univ. Tokyo, Inoue Fellow) Hiroyuki.
Optical Scalar Approach to Weak Gravitational Lensing by Thick Lenses Louis Bianchini Mentor: Dr. Thomas Kling Department of Physics, Bridgewater State.
Star-Formation in Close Pairs Selected from the Sloan Digital Sky Survey Overview The effect of galaxy interactions on star formation has been investigated.
The Milky Way PHYS390 Astrophysics Professor Lee Carkner Lecture 19.
Probing quasar accretion discs in anomalous lensed quasars Nick Bate David Floyd, Rachel Webster, Stuart Wyithe The University of Melbourne, Australia.
1. White Dwarf If initial star mass < 8 M Sun or so. (and remember: Maximum WD mass is 1.4 M Sun, radius is about that of the Earth) 2. Neutron Star If.
General Relativity Physics Honours 2006 A/Prof. Geraint F. Lewis Rm 557, A29 Lecture Notes 6.
Weak-Lensing selected, X-ray confirmed Clusters and the AGN closest to them Dara Norman NOAO/CTIO 2006 November 6-8 Boston Collaborators: Deep Lens Survey.
Physics 133: Extragalactic Astronomy and Cosmology Lecture 12; February
Some results from an optical monitoring of four quasars at Calar Alto Observatory (Almería, Spain) Aurora Ullán (UC) Jan-Erik Ovaldsen (University of Oslo)
25 YEARS AFTER THE DISCOVERY: SOME CURRENT TOPICS ON LENSED QSOs Santander (Spain), 15th-17th December 2004 FLUX RATIO ANOMALY by Luis J. Goicoechea (UC)
The line-of-sight towards GRB at z = 2.66: Probing matter at stellar, galactic and intergalactic scales Palli Jakobsson Astronomical Observatory.
First Results from an HST/ACS Snapshot Survey of Intermediate Redshift, Intermediate X-ray Luminosity Clusters of Galaxies: Early Type Galaxies and Weak.
Sampling Distributions
Advanced Methods for Studying Astronomical Populations: Inferring Distributions and Evolution of Derived (not Measured!) Quantities Brandon C. Kelly (CfA,
An alternative hypothesis to account for the LMC microlensing events Jordi Miralda-Escudé The Ohio State University IEEC/ICREA.
The Milky Way Center, Shape Globular cluster system
The Milky Way Galaxy. The Milky Way We see a band of faint light running around the entire sky. Galileo discovered it was composed of many stars. With.
An Accretion Disc Model for Quasar Optical Variability An Accretion Disc Model for Quasar Optical Variability Li Shuang-Liang Li Shuang-Liang Shanghai.
Survey Science Group Workshop 박명구, 한두환 ( 경북대 )
Chapter 1: Introduction to Statistics
1 Gravitational lensing and neutrinos Why not look where natural lenses exist? Proposal of an additional candidate list in point source search: 1. Motivation.
A Multicolor CCD Survey for Quasars z > 3 Nikhil Revankar, Dr. Julia Kennefick, Shelly Bursick University of Arkansas, Arkansas Center for Space and Planetary.
1 GALEX Angular Correlation Function … or about the Galactic extinction effects.
Tracing Dust in Spiral Galaxies: a Summary Jonathan Davies.
The Evolution of Quasars and Massive Black Holes “Quasar Hosts and the Black Hole-Spheroid Connection”: Dunlop 2004 “The Evolution of Quasars”: Osmer 2004.
Richard Mushotzky (NASA/GSFC) and Amalia K. Hicks (University of Colorado) An enduring enigma in X-ray astronomy is the "missing mass" in cooling flow.
Chapter 25 Galaxies and Dark Matter Dark Matter in the Universe We use the rotation speeds of galaxies to measure their mass:
A Short Talk on… Gravitational Lensing Presented by: Anthony L, James J, and Vince V.
Lecture Outlines Astronomy Today 8th Edition Chaisson/McMillan © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 25.
 Last Version: DR3.5  Released June 2012  Pipeline:  Optimised De- glitcher  BriGAdE  Allow Dark Pixel drift removal.
Gravitational Lensing
How Standard are Cosmological Standard Candles? Mathew Smith and Collaborators (UCT, ICG, Munich, LCOGT and SDSS-II) SKA Bursary Conference 02/12/2010.
The coordinated growth of stars, haloes and large-scale structure since z=1 Michael Balogh Department of Physics and Astronomy University of Waterloo.
Sohrab Rahvar Sharif University of Technology Marc Moniez LAL-CNRS 13th Gravitational Microlensing Workshop-January Paris.
Theoretical Predictions about the Cold- Warm Gas Size around Cluster Galaxies using MgII systems Iván Lacerna VII Reunión Anual, SOCHIAS 2009 January 14.
Lecture Outlines Astronomy Today 7th Edition Chaisson/McMillan © 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 23.
Constraining Cosmography with Cluster Lenses Jean-Paul Kneib Laboratoire d’Astrophysique de Marseille.
Correlations of Mass Distributions between Dark Matter and Visible Matter Yuriy Mishchenko and Chueng-Ryong Ji NC State University Raleigh, NC KIAS-APCTP-DMRC.
Major dry-merger rate and extremely massive major dry-mergers of BCGs Deng Zugan June 31st Taiwan.
MMT (and Magellan) Spectroscopic Survey of the Environments of Strong Gravitational Lenses Ivelina Momcheva In collaboration with: Ann Zabludoff Kurtis.
Subaru Wide-Field Survey of M87 Globular Cluster Populations N.Arimoto (NAOJ) N.Tamura, R.Sharples (Durham) M.Onodera (Tokyo, NAOJ), K.Ohta(Kyoto) J.-C.Cuillandre.
Dust Properties in Metal-Poor Environments Observed by AKARI Hiroyuki Hirashita Hiroyuki Hirashita (ASIAA, Taiwan) H. Kaneda (ISAS), T. Onaka (Univ. Tokyo),
Black hole accretion history of active galactic nuclei 曹新伍 中国科学院上海天文台.
Laboratoire d’Astrophysique Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne Switzerland The energy profile of the accretion disk in Q from 3.0 years of.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 14 The Milky Way Galaxy Lecture Outline.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 16 Galaxies and Dark Matter Lecture Outline.
Probing quasar outflows with intrinsic narrow absorption lines 1/15 The Central Engine of AGN in Xi’an (Oct. 17, 2006) T. Misawa, M. Eracleous, J. C. Charlton.
From the population to the sample The sampling distribution FETP India.
KASI Galaxy Evolution Journal Club A Massive Protocluster of Galaxies at a Redshift of z ~ P. L. Capak et al. 2011, Nature, in press (arXive: )
Chapter 25 Galaxies and Dark Matter. 25.1Dark Matter in the Universe 25.2Galaxy Collisions 25.3Galaxy Formation and Evolution 25.4Black Holes in Galaxies.
Mitesh Patel Co-Authors: Steve Warren, Daniel Mortlock, Bram Venemans, Richard McMahon, Paul Hewett, Chris Simpson, Rob Sharpe
Why is the BAT survey for AGN Important? All previous AGN surveys were biased- –Most AGN are ‘obscured’ in the UV/optical –IR properties show wide scatter.
goals  Observe distorted galaxies using advanced techmaun telescopes  Determine possible galaxy type  Determine possible causes for the distortions.
High Redshift QUASAR Spectra as Probe of Reionization of IGM.
Bayesian analysis of joint strong gravitational lensing and dynamic galactic mass in SLACS: evidence of line-of-sight contamination Antonio C. C. Guimarães.
Spectral classification of galaxies of LAMOST DR3
© 2017 Pearson Education, Inc.
Thomas Collett Institute of Astronomy, Cambridge
서울대학교 물리천문학부 천문학전공 초기우주천체연구단 윤용민
Behavior of Reddenings in the Color-Magnitude & Color-Color Diagrams of SDSS Filters 김성수, 이명균.
The spectral properties of Galactic X-ray sources at faint fluxes
Presentation transcript:

Atsunori Yonehara (Univ. Tsukuba, JSPS Fellow) with Hiroyuki Hirashita & Phillip Richter

Lines of my talk Lensed Quasars with Multiple Images - general introductions Chromaticity and the Possible Origins - prologue Absorption Properties of Lens Galaxies - scenario Quasar Microlensing - scenario Discussions - epilogue -

1. Lensed Quasars with Multiple Images ” What kind of objects ? ”

1.1 Multiple Quasars What are “ lensed quasars with multiple images ” ? The lens object is a foreground galaxy, i.e., a galaxy in the vicinity of line-of-sight to quasars (sometimes, effects of clusters should be taken into account) Path of photons from quasars is gravitationally lensed Multiple images ( “mirages” ) of the quasars are created and the number is 2 or 4 in usual cases source (quasar) observer lens galaxy image A image B

1.2 Current Status How to identify ? 1. Look for a quasar pair with small separation 2. Measure their redshifts from spectroscopic study 3. IF their redshifts are identical, they can be pair images of “ a lensed quasar with multiple images ” ! How general ? Of course, it is a rare phenomenon Now, more than 70 objects are known The number is still increasing thanks to many large surveys Q0957Q2237 B1938

1.3 Observational Properties Redshift Distributions source redshift : lens redshift : < 1 (unknown for some systems) Observed Images nicely fitted by a point source Image Separations typically, 1[arcsec] ->> lens redshift this corresponds to typical lens size for singular isothermal sphere density profile with  =200[km/s] Magnifications believed to be times in total via lens modeling magnification ratio between images have large variety no lens system here

2. Chromaticity and the Possible Origins ” What is the problem? ” ” What can we do? ”

2.1 Against Achromaticity In principle, gravitational lensing phenomena show no wavelength dependence, i.e., “ achromatic ”. ->> multiple images of the same source (quasar) should have identical colors. In real universe, it is not true. Falco et al. have summarized B-V color difference between multiple images. They found significant color difference between images. -> chromatic feature appears ! Number of images ΔE(B-V) [mag.] σ = 0.01 Gaussian (observational error) σ = 0.1 Gaussian Falco et al. (1999)

2.2 Photon’s Worry Before we observe, photon suffers from 2 problems. (excepts redshift) source lens galaxy observer [ problem 1 ] Absorbers in galaxies are spatially inhomogeneous (e.g., density contrast). ->> Suffers different absorption, and chromatic. [ problem 2 ] Distribution of stellar objects in galaxies is not exactly the same at different location. ->> Suffers different microlensing, and chromatic.

2.3 Data Analysis Intrinsic flux variation of quasars and the time delay between images are not take into account. To reduce ambiguities (for further investigations), we only choose objects that the lens and the source redshift have measured. To probe the origin of suggested chromatic feature, we only choose objects that photometric data of HST’s F160W-, F555W-, and F814W- filter are available. ->> obtain 2 independent color from the 3 bands. ->> Total : 15 objects Referring the bluest image in a system, we make “[color-difference]-[color-difference]” diagram. ->> Intrinsic color of quasars are extracted.

2.4 Faces of the Samples from CASTLEs Web-page

2.5 Color Differences 8 objects show double images The rest are quadruple The lens galaxy of 3 objects is late-type (red cross). The lens galaxy of the rest is early-type (blue cross). The sample is different from that of Falco et al. (1999) redder Try to explain this, and probe something interesting !

3. Absorption Properties of Lens Galaxies ” Possible origin (1) ” ” Expected natures ”

3.1 Justifications Effects of absorber in the lens galaxy are not negligible, at least, for objects with the late-type galaxy lens. As Dr. Hirashita (may) have already mentioned, gas distribution is clumpy over galactic scale. ->> different image suffers different extinction ! (even if the R V -value is homogeneous) Winn et al. (2002) spiral arm on an image !

3.2 Toward Comparison Calculate probability distribution of n(H) difference Apply extinction curve by Cardelli et al. (1989) Assume typical Galactic value of R V ( =3.1 ) and “ n(H) to E(B-V) conversion ” law Set the lens redshift F160W F555W F814W

3.3 Expected Behavior Color difference is large in shorter wavelength (clear correlation) Negative color- difference at longer waveband does not exist Even if we accept different extinction laws, e.g., change R V, this behavior will not alter (except some special situations). thin line : 90 % region thick line : 50 % region large n(H)

4. Quasar Microlensing ” Possible origin (2) ” ” Expected natures ”

4.1 Justifications From lens modeling, matter density of the lens galaxy on the images of lensed quasar is roughly critical density. ->> If large fraction of the matter is consists from stellar objects, microlensing should occur frequently ! Different images magnified different manner, because their stellar distribution is not exactly identical. Extended source (longer waveband) Compact source (shorter waveband) Lens Object time Flux Lens Object time Flux Different color ! image A image B timescale : several years

4.2 Toward Comparison Assume “ standard-type accretion disk ” model as a central engine of quasars and apply approximate formulae for magnification of quasar microlensing, we can calculate the expected flux variations at various wavebands. parameters: z s =2.0, z l =1.0 M BH =10 8 M ◎ accretion rate = critical value Randomly pick up the data points and compare these colors, we can mimic the effect of quasar microlensing.

4.3 Expected Behavior Correlation between 2 color-difference still exists, but negative color-difference can be reproduced ! Several parameters are unknown (including accretion disk model) ->> They will be constrained from this chromatic properties. black hole mass, accretion rate, magnification pattern, total and stellar mass density of the lens galaxy

5. Discussions ” Summary ” ” More things to say ”

5.1 Summary Chromaticity really exists in lensed quasars with multiple images (at least, in part). <<- Intervening object naturally produce such feature. In some cases, chromatic feature is not able to be explained by absorption properties of galaxies. ->> Quasar microlensing can also be the origin (partly). However, if we did not assume R V -value etc. and/or accept some special lens redshift and/or other extinction curves, we can manage to reproduce “ quasar microlens ” -like color change only from absorption. This kind of study opening new window to absorption properties of inter stellar matter in OTHER galaxies and structures/physical parameters of quasars.

5.2 An Example of Case Study For objects with a late-type lens galaxy, we have performed rough fitting for R V by eye. Only from these simple study, we cannot say many things about difference between absorption properties of our galaxy and that of other galaxies. (Solar values seem to be pretty good)

5.3 My Worry – Perspective - Some of the multiple images still have large photometric error (even in the HST data). <<- Comes from the reference selection. Sometimes the bluest images have large photometric errors. Intrinsic flux variation of quasars and the time delay ->> This must be the third candidate of the chromatic features (primal origin !? the most important !?). Future/on-going (monitoring) observations will provide nice opportunities or answer to approach these issues. Photon’s worry is my worry, and I have to overcome ! To study structure of galaxies and quasars … To become happy …

Fin.