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Shape, shear and flexion - II. Quantifying the flexion formalism for extended sources with the ray-bundle method★

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posted on 2024-07-26, 13:59 authored by Christopher FlukeChristopher Fluke, P. D. Lasky
Flexion-based weak gravitational lensing analysis is proving to be a useful adjunct to traditional shear-based techniques. As flexion arises from gradients across an image, analytic and numerical techniques are required to investigate flexion predictions for extended image/source pairs. Using the Schwarzschild lens model, we demonstrate that the ray-bundle method for gravitational lensing can be used to accurately recover second flexion, and is consistent with recovery of zero first flexion. Using lens plane to source plane bundle propagation, we find that second flexion can be recovered with an error no worse than 1 per cent for bundle radii smaller than Δθ= 0.01θE and lens plane impact pararameters greater than θE+Δθ, where θE is the angular Einstein radius. Using source plane to lens plane bundle propagation, we demonstrate the existence of a preferred flexion zone. For images at radii closer to the lens than the inner boundary of this zone, indicative of the true strong lensing regime, the flexion formalism should be used with caution (errors greater than 5 per cent for extended image/source pairs). We also define a shear-zone boundary, beyond which image shapes are essentially indistinguishable from ellipses (1 per cent error in ellipticity). While suggestive that a traditional weak lensing analysis is satisfactory beyond this boundary, a potentially detectable non-zero flexion signal remains.

Funding

The Commonwealth Cosmology Initiative: From the First Objects to the Cosmic Web

Australian Research Council

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PDF (Accepted manuscript)

ISSN

0035-8711

Journal title

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society

Volume

416

Issue

3

Pagination

12 pp

Publisher

Wiley

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2011 The authors. Journal compilation Copyright © 2011 Royal Astronomical Society. The accepted manuscript is reproduced in accordance with the copyright policy of the publisher. The definitive publication is available at www.interscience.wiley.com.

Language

eng

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