Dark energy with gravitational lens time delays
T.Treu, P.J.Marshall, F.-Y.Cyr-Racine, C.D.Fassnacht, C.R.Keeton,, E.V.Linder, L.A.Moustakas, M.Bradac, E.Buckley-Geer, T.Collett, F.Courbin,, G.Dobler, D.A.Finley, J.Hjorth, C.S.Kochanek, E.Komatsu, L.V.E.Koopmans,, G.Meylan, P.Natarajan, M.Oguri, S.H.Suyu, M.Tewes, K.C.Wong

TL;DR
Strong gravitational lensing time delays are a promising low-redshift method for probing dark energy, with upcoming surveys expected to vastly increase data, enabling significant improvements in understanding dark energy's properties.
Contribution
This paper highlights the potential of gravitational lens time delays for dark energy studies and outlines a strategic plan for data acquisition, analysis, and technological development over the next decade.
Findings
Single lens can measure distance with 6-7% accuracy.
Upcoming surveys will discover thousands of lensed quasars.
Enhanced data will significantly improve dark energy constraints.
Abstract
Strong lensing gravitational time delays are a powerful and cost effective probe of dark energy. Recent studies have shown that a single lens can provide a distance measurement with 6-7 % accuracy (including random and systematic uncertainties), provided sufficient data are available to determine the time delay and reconstruct the gravitational potential of the deflector. Gravitational-time delays are a low redshift (z~0-2) probe and thus allow one to break degeneracies in the interpretation of data from higher-redshift probes like the cosmic microwave background in terms of the dark energy equation of state. Current studies are limited by the size of the sample of known lensed quasars, but this situation is about to change. Even in this decade, wide field imaging surveys are likely to discover thousands of lensed quasars, enabling the targeted study of ~100 of these systems and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdaptive optics and wavefront sensing · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Radio Astronomy Observations and Technology
