The Carousel Lens II: Cosmological Constraints with GIGA-Lens
Felipe Urcelay, Xiaosheng Huang, William Sheu, Jackson H. O'Donnell, Tesla Jeltema, Demetrius Y. Williams, Sean Xu, Shrihan Agarwal, Greg Aldering, David \'Alvarez-Garc\'ia, Harsh Ambardekar, Tania M. Barone, Fuyan Bian, Adam S. Bolton, Aleksandar Cikota, Gerrit S. Farren

TL;DR
This paper demonstrates that the Carousel Lens, a cluster-scale gravitational lens with multiple sources, can provide competitive cosmological constraints on dark matter and dark energy parameters, comparable to traditional methods like CMB and SNe Ia.
Contribution
The study introduces the use of the Carousel Lens with the GIGA-Lens pipeline to derive cosmological constraints, highlighting its potential as a competitive and independent probe.
Findings
Carousel Lens alone constrains Ω_m and w with uncertainties comparable to CMB.
Adding more high-redshift sources significantly improves constraints.
Systematic uncertainties currently dominate but can be reduced with better data and modeling.
Abstract
The nature of dark matter and dark energy are among the central questions in cosmology. Strong gravitational lenses with multiple source planes provide a geometric probe of cosmology: the ratio of deflection angles at different redshifts depends only on angular-diameter distances, constraining the matter density and the dark energy equation of state . However, constraints from this technique have historically lagged behind those from the CMB, SNe Ia, and BAO. In this work, we present new cosmological constraints from the Carousel Lens, a cluster-scale lens with more than 40 extended images from 11 spectroscopically confirmed sources. Its relaxed core and rich set of extended images behind the main halo make it particularly suitable for cosmological inference. Using the GIGA-Lens pipeline, we construct a pixel-level lens model including six HST-detected sources and four…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGalaxies: Formation, Evolution, Phenomena · Cosmology and Gravitation Theories · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
