Peculiar Transverse Velocities of Galaxies from Quasar Microlensing. Tentative Estimate of the Peculiar Velocity Dispersion at $z\sim 0.5$
E. Mediavilla, J. Jimenez-Vicente, J. A. Munoz, E. Battaner

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel method using quasar microlensing variability to estimate the transverse peculiar velocities of lens galaxies at intermediate redshifts, providing insights consistent with local universe measurements.
Contribution
It develops a new methodology to measure galaxy peculiar velocities via microlensing event rates and applies it to an ensemble of 17 systems, offering tentative velocity dispersion estimates at z~0.5.
Findings
Tentative velocity dispersion at z~0.5: ~638 km/s
Velocity dispersion at z=0: ~491 km/s
Method dominated by Poisson noise for current data
Abstract
We propose to use the flux variability of lensed quasar images induced by gravitational microlensing to measure the transverse peculiar velocity of lens galaxies over a wide range of redshift. Microlensing variability is caused by the motions of the observer, the lens galaxy (including the motion of the stars within the galaxy), and the source; hence, its frequency is directly related to the galaxy's transverse peculiar velocity. The idea is to count time-event rates (e.g., peak or caustic crossing rates) in the observed microlensing light curves of lensed quasars that can be compared with model predictions for different values of the transverse peculiar velocity. To compensate for the large time-scale of microlensing variability we propose to count and model the number of events in an ensemble of gravitational lenses. We develop the methodology to achieve this goal and apply it to an…
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