Multi-wavelength probes of distant lensed galaxies

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Abstract

I summarise recent results on multi-wavelength properties of distant lensed galaxies, with a particular focus on Herschel. Submm surveys have already resulted in a breakthrough discovery of an extremely efficient selection technique for strong gravitational lenses. Benefitting from the gravitational magnification boost, blind mm-wave redshifts have been demonstrated on IRAM, SMA and GBT, and follow-up emission line detections have been made of water, [OIII], [CII] and other species, revealing the PDR/XDR/CRDR conditions. I also discuss HST imaging of submm lenses, lensed galaxy reconstruction, the prospects for ALMA and e-Merlin and the effects of differential magnification. Many emission line diagnostics are relatively unaffected by differential magnification, but SED-based estimates of bolometric fractions in lensed infrared galaxies are so unreliable as to be useless, unless a lens mass model is available to correct for differential amplification. © 2012 International Astronomical Union.

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Serjeant, S. (2011). Multi-wavelength probes of distant lensed galaxies. In Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union (Vol. 7, pp. 475–481). Cambridge University Press. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1743921312009660

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