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Until recently, weak lensing had been
limited to calculating the total mass of relatively nearby groups and clusters
of galaxies. Their total mass includes both ordinary, visible matter like stars
and dust – what astronomers call “baryonic” matter – plus the much more massive
invisible concentrations of dark matter that form groups and clusters by
pulling galaxies together.
Spearheaded by a Berkeley Lab cosmologist, an international
team has extended the reliability of gravitational lensing to much older, more
distant, and smaller galactic structures than previously possible. Visible-light images from the Hubble Space Telescope populate this tiny
section of the full two-square-degree Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS), which
combines data in many wavelengths from space and ground-based telescopes around
the world. COSMOS was the basis of a new extension of the mass-luminosity
relation for weak lensing studies.
Astronomers were able to establish an
important scaling relationship for nearby clusters between their total masses,
determined by gravitational lensing, and the brightness of their x-ray
emissions, an indication of the mass of the ordinary matter alone. A new study
in the Astrophysical Journal (ApJ) now continues this important
relationship to distant objects.
“We’ve been able to extend measurements of
mass to much smaller structures, which existed much earlier in the history of
the Universe,” says Alexie Leauthaud, a Chamberlain Fellow in Berkeley Lab’s
Physics Division and first author of the ApJ
study. “This helps us gain a better understanding of the relationship between
the normal matter in dense structures, which are seen through the x-ray
luminosity, and the total dark-matter mass of these structures, as measured by
the weak lensing.” Leauthaud is a member of the Berkeley Center
for Cosmological Physics (BCCP) at UC Berkeley and Berkeley Lab.
Mass as a lens
Gravitational lensing occurs because mass
curves the space around it, bending the paths along which rays of light travel:
the more mass (and the closer to the center of mass), the more space bends, and
the more the image of a distant object is displaced and distorted. Thus
measuring distortion, or “shear,” is key to measuring the mass of the lensing
object.
At least this is so for “strong” lensing.
A very massive object or collection of objects, like a nearby galaxy cluster
and the invisible dark matter that encloses it, distorts the apparent shape and
position of bright objects beyond it so much that the distant images are bent
and may even be smeared into rings around the foreground cluster. The visible
distortion is a direct measure of the mass of the lens and points to its
center.
A spectacular example of
strong gravitational lensing is the nearby galaxy cluster Abell 2218 (top), in
which the visible distortion of individual background galaxies can be used to
measure the mass of the lensing structure. The weak lensing of fainter and more
distant structures must be detected by statistical averaging (bottom). (Abell
2218 image by NASA, weak lensing simulation by Bhuvnesh Jain, Uroš Seljak, and
Simon White)
Weak lensing works the same way, except
that the shear is too subtle to be seen directly. Most of the apparent shear
isn’t distortion at all – a galaxy has its own distinct shape, and we often see
it from an angle that makes it look elongated. Apparent shear may also be due
to the telescope, the detector, or the atmosphere.
Nevertheless, faint additional distortions
in a collection of distant galaxies can be calculated statistically, and the
average shear due to the lensing of some massive object in front of them can be
computed. Yet to calculate the lens’s mass from average shear, one needs to
know its center.
“The problem with low-mass, high-redshift
clusters is that it is difficult to determine which exact galaxy lies at the
center of the cluster,” says Leauthaud. “That’s where x-rays help. The x-ray
luminosity from a galaxy cluster can be used to find its center very
accurately.”
The
hot intracluster medium of gas or plasma that fills almost all galaxy clusters
emits x-rays, making x-ray emission a convenient way to find distant galaxy
structures in the night sky. But how does this emission help find the center of
mass in a galaxy cluster? For the same reason that dark matter is dark.
Why dark matter is darkExcept through gravitation, dark matter
does not interact (or interacts only very weakly) with itself or with ordinary
matter. Indeed, that’s why it’s dark: to emit light it would have to interact
via the electromagnetic force.
With ordinary matter, electromagnetism
affects everything from chemistry to luminosity to electric and magnetic fields
and even the pressure of stellar winds; thus electromagnetism plays an important
role in determining the arrangement of ordinary matter, which is often
irregular.
Because electromagnetism plays no role in
the distribution of dark matter, however, dark matter forms large, smooth,
spherical clumps, usually filled by ordinary galaxies plus hot gas or plasma,
which it has trapped and retained solely through gravitation.
“Gas density follows the dark matter
density, and because x-ray emission scales as the square of the gas density,
the x-ray light shines very strongly in the core of the structure,” Leauthaud
explains. “So x-rays are an excellent way to determine the center of even a
distant, fuzzy galaxy cluster.”
“Basically the more mass, the more heat,”
says Jean-Paul Kneib, a lead author of the ApJ
paper from the Laboratory of Astrophysics of Marseilles (LAM) and France’s
National Center for Scientific Research (CNRS). “But the plasma is baryonic
matter, which is only a small part of the total mass of the cluster. While the
x-radiation tells you something about the total mass, you need to get the
scaling just right.”
Visible matter follows an
underlying dark matter scaffolding. At left, blue indicates the mass of stars
in galaxies in a given area, yellow the number of galaxies, and red the sources
of brightest x-ray emission. Contours at right are the distribution of dark
matter, from gravitational lensing. (Richard Massey et al, Nature 2007. Click
on image for best resolution.)
To pin down the scaling relation between
x-ray brightness and total mass, Leauthaud and her colleagues first used x-ray
luminosity to identify the center of mass of 206 galaxy groups and clusters,
including numerous faint, distant clusters listed in the Hubble Space
Telescope’s Cosmic Evolution Survey (COSMOS), which is curated by Nick Scoville
of the California Institute of Technology, an author of the ApJ paper.
X-ray imaging came from the European Space
Agency’s XMM-Newton satellite and from NASA’s Chandra satellite, whose
principal investigator is Martin Elvis of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center
for Astrophysics, an author of the ApJ
paper. Elvis says, “I never thought our Chandra data would enable such a great
measurement. In fact I was astonished when Alexie first showed me the results.
It’s quite a tour de force of analysis, and really convincing.”
The X-ray analysis itself was performed by
Alexis Finoguenov of the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics and
the University of
Maryland, one of the
paper’s lead authors. Knowing the centers of mass from analysis of x-ray
emission, the researchers could now use weak lensing to estimate the total mass
of the distant groups and clusters with greater accuracy than ever before.
Finally they calculated the
mass-luminosity relation for the new collections of groups and clusters and
found that it was consistent with previous relations established by surveys of
much closer structures – including some studied with strong gravitational
lensing. Within calculable uncertainty, the relation follows the same straight
slope from nearby galaxy clusters to distant ones; a simple, consistent scaling
factor relates a group or cluster’s total mass to its x-ray brightness, or
“baryonic tracer.”
“By confirming the mass-luminosity
relation and extending it to high redshifts,” Leauthaud says, “we have taken a
small step in the right direction toward using weak lensing as a powerful tool
to measure the evolution of structure.”
In the beginningThe origin of galaxies can be traced back
to slight differences in the density of the hot, liquid-like early universe;
traces of these differences can still be seen as minute temperature differences
in the cosmic microwave background (CMB).
“The variations we observe in the ancient
microwave sky represent the imprints that developed over time into the cosmic
dark-matter scaffolding for the galaxies we see today,” says BCCP director and
UC Berkeley physics professor George Smoot of Berkeley Lab’s Physics Division,
who shared the 2006 Nobel Prize in Physics for measuring anisotropies in the
CMB and is one of the authors of the ApJ
paper. “It is very exciting that we can actually measure with gravitational
lensing how the dark matter has collapsed and evolved since the beginning.”
Dark matter shapes visible
matter in a way that reflects the nature of dark energy. How galaxies are
distributed in a Universe with no dark energy (left) would differ measurably
from one in which dark energy is significant (right).
One goal in studying the evolution of
structure is to understand dark matter itself, and how it interacts with the
ordinary matter we can see. Another goal is to learn more about dark energy,
the mysterious something that is pushing matter apart and causing the Universe
to expand at an accelerating rate. Is dark energy constant, or is it dynamic?
Or is it unreal, merely an illusion caused by a limitation in Einstein’s
General Theory of Relativity?
The tools provided by the extended
mass-luminosity relationship will do much to answer these questions about the
opposing roles of gravity and dark energy in the once and future shape of the
Universe.
“A Weak Lensing Study of X-Ray Groups in
the COSMOS Survey: Form and Evolution of the Mass-Luminosity Relation,” by
Alexie Leauthaud, Alexis Finoguenov, Jean-Paul Kneib, James E. Taylor, Richard
Massey, Jason Rhodes, Olivier Ilbert, Kevin Bundy, Jeremy Tinker, Matthew R.
George, Peter Capak, Anton M. Koekemoer, David E. Johnston, Yu-Ying Zhang, Nico
Cappelluti, Richard S. Ellis, Martin Elvis, Catherine Heymans, Oliver Le Fèvre,
Simon Lilly, Henry J. McCracken, Yannick Mellier, Alexandre Réfrégier, Mara
Salvato, Nick Scoville, George Smoot, Masayuki Tanaka, Ludovic Van Waerbeke,
and Melody Wolk, appears in the Astrophysical
Journal and is available online to
subscribers.
Berkeley Lab is a U.S. Department of
Energy national laboratory located in Berkeley,
California. It conducts
unclassified scientific research for DOE’s Office of Science and is managed by
the University of
California. Visit our
website at http://www.lbl.gov.
Additional Information
Read the ESA’s article
on this work
More about weak
gravitational lensing
More about the COSMOS survey
Alexie Leauthaud demonstrates how dark matter causes
gravitational lensing
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