On the Origin of Flux Ratio Anomaly in Quadruple Lens Systems
Kaiki Taro Inoue

TL;DR
This paper investigates the causes of flux ratio anomalies in quadruple lens systems, finding that line-of-sight structures play a dominant role over subhaloes, with implications for dark matter distribution.
Contribution
It provides a semi-analytic estimation of magnification perturbations from subhaloes and line-of-sight structures, highlighting their relative impacts on flux ratio anomalies.
Findings
Line-of-sight structures cause about 10% flux ratio changes.
Subhaloes contribute roughly 40% of the total perturbation at z_S=0.7.
Observed convergence perturbations correlate strongly with source redshift.
Abstract
We explore the origin of flux ratio anomaly in quadruple lens systems. Using a semi-analytic method based on -body simulations, we estimate the effect of possible magnification perturbation caused by subhaloes with a mass scale of < in lensing galaxy haloes. Taking into account astrometric shifts, assuming that the primary lens is described by a singular isothermal ellipsoid, the expected change to the flux ratios per a multiply lensed image is just a few percent and the mean of the expected convergence perturbation at the effective Einstein radius of the lensing galaxy halo is , corresponding to the mean of the ratio of a projected dark matter mass fraction in subhaloes at the effective Einstein radius . In contrast, the expected change to the flux ratio caused by line-of-sight structures is typically percent and the mean…
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