Gravitational lensing effects of supermassive black holes in cluster environments
Guillaume Mahler, Priyamvada Natarajan, Mathilde Jauzac, Johan, Richard

TL;DR
This paper investigates how supermassive black holes in galaxy clusters affect gravitational lensing, identifying observable signatures like image splitting and asymmetries, which can be detected with future high-resolution telescopes.
Contribution
It demonstrates that SMBHs can produce detectable lensing signatures such as image splitting and asymmetries, providing a new method to observe wandering SMBHs in clusters.
Findings
SMBHs cause detectable image splitting and asymmetries in lensing configurations.
No significant effect of SMBHs on overall magnification distribution.
Specific observed lensing features can be explained by SMBHs in case studies.
Abstract
This study explores the gravitational lensing effects of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) in galaxy clusters. While the presence of central SMBHs in galaxies is firmly established, recent work from high-resolution simulations predict the existence of an additional population of wandering SMBHs. Though the masses of these SMBHs are a minor perturbation on the larger scale and individual galaxy scale dark matter components in the cluster, they can impact statistical lensing properties and individual lensed image configurations. Probing for these potentially observable signatures, we find that SMBHs imprint detectable signatures in rare, higher-order strong lensing image configurations although they do not manifest any statistically significant detectable evidence in either the magnification distribution or the integrated shear profile. Investigating specific lensed image geometries, we…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Astronomy and Astrophysical Research · Astrophysical Phenomena and Observations
