Weak Lensing by Line-of-sight Halos as the Origin of Flux-ratio Anomalies in Quadruply Lensed QSOs
Kaiki Taro Inoue, Ryuichi Takahashi

TL;DR
This paper investigates how weak lensing by small line-of-sight halos causes flux-ratio anomalies in quadruply lensed QSOs, providing a new explanation consistent with observations and probing mini-halo clustering.
Contribution
It demonstrates that line-of-sight halos with masses between 10^3 and 10^7 solar masses can account for observed flux anomalies, using a detailed non-linear power spectrum from simulations.
Findings
Magnification perturbation ratio is about 10% for intervening halos.
Predicted convergence perturbations increase with source redshift.
Small halos significantly influence flux ratios, offering a probe of mini-halo clustering.
Abstract
We explore the weak lensing effect by line-of-sight halos and sub-halos with a mass of M < 10^7 solar mass in QSO-galaxy strong lens systems with quadruple images in a concordant LCDM universe. Using a polynomially fitted non-linear power spectrum P(k) obtained from N-body simulations that can resolve halos with a mass of M ~ 10^5 solar mass, or structures with a comoving wavenumber of k ~ 3*10^2 h/Mpc, we find that the ratio of magnification perturbation due to intervening halos to that of a primary lens is typically ~10 per cent and the predicted values agree well with the estimated values for 6 observed QSO-galaxy lens systems with quadruple images in the mid-infrared band without considering the effects of substructures inside a primary lens. We also find that the estimated amplitudes of convergence perturbation for the 6 lenses increase with the source redshift as predicted by…
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