Detection of systematic gravitational lens galaxy image alignments - Mapping dark matter in galaxy clusters

  • Tyson J
  • Wenk R
  • Valdes F
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Abstract

A gravitational lens distorts most background galaxies by stretching along a circle centered on the lens. This systematic alignment of 20-60 faint background galaxy images has been detected, centered on foreground galaxy clusters of high velocity dispersion. The background galaxy population is selected by its extreme blue B-R color. At a limiting surface brightness of 29 B mag/sq arcsec, there are over 30 background galaxies/sq arcmin per mag anywhere in the sky, which is sufficient to map statistically the dark matter distribution in a foreground cluster. The dark matter is apparently correlated (center and radial extent) with the cluster red light, suggestive of a baryonic origin or dissipative coupling. The existence of a high percentage of lens-distorted faint blue galaxies sets a lower limit of approximately 0.9 to this background galaxy population mean redshift.

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Tyson, J. A., Wenk, R. A., & Valdes, F. (1990). Detection of systematic gravitational lens galaxy image alignments - Mapping dark matter in galaxy clusters. The Astrophysical Journal, 349, L1. https://doi.org/10.1086/185636

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