Broadband Photometry of 105 Giant Arcs: Redshift Constraints and Implications for Giant Arc Statistics
Matthew B. Bayliss

TL;DR
This study analyzes the photometric properties and redshift distribution of 105 giant arcs from galaxy cluster lenses, confirming a median redshift of about 2.0 and implications for cosmological models.
Contribution
It provides the first broad redshift constraints for a large sample of giant arcs, confirming the median redshift and its consistency with previous smaller samples.
Findings
71% of arcs at z > 1.0
Median redshift z_s = 2.0
Supports the presence of many high-redshift magnified galaxies
Abstract
We measure the photometric properties of 105 giant arcs that were identified in systematic searches for galaxy-cluster-scale strong lenses in the Second Red-Sequence Cluster Survey (RCS-2) and the Sloan Digital Sky Survey (SDSS). The cluster lenses span 0.2 < z_lens < 1.2 in redshift, with a median z_lens = 0.58. Using broadband color criteria we sort the entire arc sample into redshift bins based on u-g and g-r colors, and also r-z colors for the ~90% of arcs that have z-band data. This analysis yields broad redshift constraints with 71 +5 -4 % of the arcs at z > 1.0, 64 +6 -4 % at z > 1.4, 56 +5 -4 % at z > 1.9, and 21 +4 -2 % at z > 2.7. The remaining 29 +3 -5 % have z < 1. The inferred median redshift is z_s = 2.0 +/- 0.1, in good agreement with a previous determination from a smaller sample of brighter arcs (g < 22.5). This agreement confirms that z_s = 2.0 +/- 0.1 is the typical…
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