论文标题
测量旋转光环I的重力失真:方法
Measuring the gravitomagnetic distortion from rotating halos I: methods
论文作者
论文摘要
源银河图像不仅因静态引力电位而扭曲,而且会因大规模旋转物体(如星系簇)引起的框架拖拉而扭曲。从理论上讲,这种效果是充分理解的,因此,估计其对未来调查的可检测性是极大的兴趣。在这项工作中,我们分析了旋转暗物质光环的镜头收敛$κ$。巨大物体的旋转产生引力潜力,从而产生对镜头电位的各向异性贡献。我们构建了一个估计器$Δκ$,以描述对称增强轴的对称增强和降低光环旋转轴周围的$κ$之间的差异,发现它与与光晕速度分散平方成比例成比例的功能相比,无量纲的角度动量参数。我们使用具有逼真的噪声水平的模拟模拟来进行LSST之类的调查,我们测试了我们的估计器,并表明堆叠旋转镜头框架拖延的信号与零在$1σ$以内的零一致。但是,我们发现SDSS DR7光谱型组目录中最大的群集具有195.0 km/s的视线旋转速度,速度分散速度为667.8 km/s,根据Angular Mompantibal Piperability Probity Probients simborts from n-body sims sims sims sims sim n-body sim n-body sim n-body。通过研究SDSS DR7光谱选定的组目录,我们显示了如何识别旋转簇,并且发现基于模拟的估计值可能比估计值更丰富,在未来的监视中可以检测到引力失真的检测
Source galaxy images are distorted not only by a static gravitational potential, but also by frame-dragging induced by massive rotating objects like clusters of galaxies. Such effect is well understood theoretically, it is therefore of great interest to estimate its detectability for future surveys. In this work, we analyze the lensing convergence $κ$ around rotating dark matter halos. The rotation of the massive objects generates a gravitomagnetic potential giving rise to an anisotropic contribution to the lensing potential. We construct an estimator $δκ$ to describe the difference between the symmetric enhancement and reduction of $κ$ around the halo rotation axis, finding that it is well approximated by a function proportional to the halo velocity dispersion squared times a dimensionless angular momentum parameter. Using simulation mocks with realistic noise level for a survey like LSST, we test our estimator, and show that the signal from frame-dragging of stacked rotating lenses is consistent with zero within $1σ$. However, we find that the most massive cluster in SDSS DR7 spectroscopic selected group catalog has a line-of-sight rotation velocity of 195.0km/s and velocity dispersion of 667.8km/s, which is at $1.2\times 10^{-8}$ odds according to the angular momentum probability distribution inferred from N-body simulations. By studying SDSS DR7 spectroscopic selected group catalog, we show how rotating clusters can be identified, and, finding that fast rotating clusters might be more abundant than in estimates based on simulations, a detection of gravitomagnetic distortion may be at reach in future surveys