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A VLA Gravitational Lens Survey

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 July 2016

J. N. Hewitt
Affiliation:
MIT and Haystack Observatory
E. L. Turner
Affiliation:
Princeton
B. F. Burke
Affiliation:
MIT
C. R. Lawrence
Affiliation:
Caltech
C. L. Bennett
Affiliation:
NASA/GSFC
G. I. Langston
Affiliation:
MIT
J. E. Gunn
Affiliation:
Princeton

Extract

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Gravitational lens surveys are of cosmological interest because they provide a way to measure the gravitational field of both luminous and dark matter. Many of the other methods used to detect the presence of dark matter, such as studies of galaxy rotation curves and cluster dynamics, require that there be luminous objects in the gravitational field that act as tracers of the mass. This may introduce a selection effect. In constrast, in studies of gravitational lenses, the beacon we observe can be far (at distances of order one thousand Mpc) from the gravitational field. In this paper we describe a VLA survey designed to detect gravitational lensing on sub-arc second and arc second scales. We also present a preliminary result of the radio data: we find that the density of matter in the form of a uniform, comoving number density of 1011 to 1012M compact objects, luminous or dark, must be substantially less than the critical density.

Type
Chapter XIII: Gravitational Lenses
Copyright
Copyright © Reidel 1987 

References

Bennett, C. L., Lawrence, C. R., Burke, B. F., Hewitt, J. N., and Mahoney, J. H. 1986, Ap. J. (Supp.), 61, 1.Google Scholar
Press, W. H., and Gunn, J. E. 1973, Ap. J., 185, 397.Google Scholar
Turner, E. L., Ostriker, J. P., and Gott, J. R. III. 1984, Ap. J., 284, 1.Google Scholar