Cluster Lenses
Jean-Paul Kneib (LAM), Priyamvada Natarajan (Yale)

TL;DR
Galaxy clusters are powerful gravitational lenses that distort and magnify light from distant objects, enabling studies of dark matter, galaxy formation, and cosmological parameters through strong and weak lensing observations.
Contribution
This review summarizes the fundamentals of cluster lensing and provides an up-to-date overview of the field's current status and recent developments.
Findings
Cluster lensing reveals dark matter distribution in clusters.
Weak lensing statistically probes high-redshift galaxy populations.
Lensing measurements constrain cosmological parameters and dark energy.
Abstract
Clusters of galaxies are the most recently assembled, massive, bound structures in the Universe. As predicted by General Relativity, given their masses, clusters strongly deform space-time in their vicinity. Clusters act as some of the most powerful gravitational lenses in the Universe. Light rays traversing through clusters from distant sources are hence deflected, and the resulting images of these distant objects therefore appear distorted and magnified. Lensing by clusters occurs in two regimes, each with unique observational signatures. The strong lensing regime is characterized by effects readily seen by eye, namely, the production of giant arcs, multiple-images, and arclets. The weak lensing regime is characterized by small deformations in the shapes of background galaxies only detectable statistically. Cluster lenses have been exploited successfully to address several important…
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