A method for efficient measurement of gravitational lens time delays
G. G\"urkan, N. Jackson, I. W. A. Browne, L.V.E. Koopmans, C.D., Fassnacht, A. Berciano Alba

TL;DR
The paper introduces an efficient method for measuring gravitational lens time delays using low-resolution monitoring to trigger high-resolution observations, reducing the need for extensive high-res telescope time.
Contribution
A novel technique that combines low-resolution flux monitoring with targeted high-resolution follow-up to measure lens time delays more efficiently.
Findings
Simulations demonstrate the method's effectiveness.
Pilot project with WSRT and VLA validates the approach.
Potential to improve Hubble constant measurements.
Abstract
The Hubble constant value is currently known to 10% accuracy unless assumptions are made for the cosmology (Sandage et al. 2006). Gravitational lens systems provide another probe of the Hubble constant using time delay measurements. However, current investigations of ~20 time delay lenses, albeit of varying levels of sophistication, have resulted in different values of the Hubble constant ranging from 50-80 km/s/Mpc. In order to reduce uncertainties, more time delay measurements are essential together with better determined mass models (Oguri 2007, Saha et al. 2006). We propose a more efficient technique for measuring time delays which does not require regular monitoring with a high-resolution interferometer array. The method uses double image and long-axis quadruple lens systems in which the brighter component varies first and dominates the total flux density. Monitoring the total flux…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadio Astronomy Observations and Technology · Pulsars and Gravitational Waves Research · Galaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena
