Wednesdays, 3:30-4:30 p.m. in Pratt, unless otherwise noted.
Graduate seminar on topical areas in modern astrophysics and
cosmology. Each semester a different topic of current special
interest is selected. Participants in this seminar discuss papers
given by seminar members (in rotation). Several faculty members also
participate.
Note: Participation for three semesters is required to obtain
credit for this course.
Gravitational
Lensing Demonstration
CASTLe - CfA-Arizona
Space
Telescope
Lens
Survey
GeneralSchedule for Spring'2004:
``Organizational meeting'' - Kris Stanek, Scott Gaudi and Josh Winn
0. February 4th, 2004Abstract:
How the course is organized. Motivation for the topic. Scheduling the
talks.General reading material and useful links for the Semester:
Always useful are the NASA Astrophysics Data
System and the astro-ph preprint
archive
- Ongoing microlensing project
(see also OGLE III
Early Warning System)
``History, Overview and Basic Theory of
Gravitational Lensing'' - Randall
Cooper
1. February 4th, 2004Abstract:
Though the basic idea has existed since the eighteenth century,
gravitational lensing has been used regularly as an astronomical tool
for only the past 25 years. Gravitational lensing, the attraction of
light by matter, has recently become a hot topic of research. I will
begin with an historical introduction to the field. Next, I will
explain some of the basic theory of gravitational lensing. Finally, I
will conclude with an overview of this topic's many subfields.Reading material:
``General Theory of Gravitational
Lensing'' - Xavier
Koenig
2. February 11th, 2004 Abstract:
Following on from the first talk, which briefly introduced the theory
of Gravitational Lensing, I will recap and build upon what was shown
then, in order to develop and demonstrate the tools and concepts that
will be needed as the semester of talks progresses. Particularly, I
will explain what is meant by caustics and critical lines, and how the
lens equation naturally leads us to apply Fermat's Principle to the
problem of Gravitational Lensing as an extension of geometrical
optics. I will sum up by considering the specific applications of
these tools to the various sub-fields - microlensing, strong lensing
and others.
Reading material:
``Strong Lensing'' - Kaloyan
Penev
3. February 18th, 2004 Abstract:
I will start with a historical introduction, briefly covering the most
important steps in strong lensing. Afterwards, following up on the
general gravitational lensing expressions I will introduce the
conditions for strong lensing and how one identifies them. Then I will
switch over to modelling and reconstructing the lens mass. I will
introduce both types of models used today - parametric and free
form. I will describe the effects of nearby clusters and briefly
introduce microlensing and the effects it has on the images observed.Reading material:
``Cosmology and Strongly-Lensed
QSOs" - Andrew Friedman
4. February 25th, 2004 Abstract:
In this talk I will build upon our previous discussions of strong gravitational
lensing and discuss the major applications of strong lensing of quasars for cosmology,
namely determining Ho from time delays and constraining Omega_Lambda from quasar
lensing statistics. I will outline the history and theoretical background for
both approaches, discuss the most current cosmological lensing constraints on
Ho and Omega_Lambda, and place them in the context of other cosmographic constrains
from Cepheids, CMB, SNe Ia, and LSS measurements.
Reading material:
* Blandford
& Narayan, 1992 (Cosmological applications of gravitational lensing)...excel
lent
review.
Blandford
& Narayan, 1986, (Fermat's principle, caustics, and the classification
of gravitational lens images)
Courbin,
Saha, & Schechter, 2002 (Another good review on Quasar Lensing)
Hogg, 2000, astro-ph/9905116,
(Distance Measures in Cosmology...very useful cheat sheet for cosmological distance
formulae)
The Hubble Constant Ho
Kochanek
& Schechter, 2003, eprint arXiv:astro-ph/0306040, (The Hubble
Constant from Gravitational Lens Time Delays)...The Ho part of my talk primarily
followed this review.
Courbin,
F. eprint arXiv:astro-ph/0304497 (Quasar Lensing: the Observer's Point of
View)
Refsdal,
S. 1964, MNRAS, Vol. 128, p.307. (On the possibility of determining Hubble's
parameter and the masses of galaxies from the gravitational lens effect)...seminal
paper
The Cosmological Constant - Omega_Lambda
Mitchell,
Keeton, Frieman, & Sheth, 2004, eprint arXiv:astro-ph/0401138,
(Robust Cosmological Constraints from Gravitational Lens Statistics)...The Lambda
part of my talk primarily followed this review.
Kochanek,
C. 1996, (Is There a Cosmological Constant?)...provocative early paper -
pre SNe Ia or WMAP
Kochanek,
C. 1993, (Analytic results for the gravitational lens statistics of singular
isothermal spheres in general cosmologies)
Carroll,
Press, & Turner, 1992, ARA&A. (The cosmological constant)...massive
annual review article
Turner,
E. 1990, (Gravitational lensing limits on the cosmological constant in a
flat universe)
Gott,
Park, & Lee, 1989. (Setting limits on q0 from gravitational lensing)
Turner,
Ostriker, & Gott, (The statistics of gravitational lenses - The distributions
of image angular separations and lens redshifts)...original formalism
Web
Links :
CASTLe - CfA-Arizona Space
Telescope Lens Survey
CLASS
Cosmic Lens All-Sky Survey
5. March 3rd, 2004
6. March 10th, 2004
7. March 17th, 2004
Powerpoint version of the talk.
8. March 24th, 2004 (in Phillips)
9. April 7th, 2004
10. April 14th, 2004
11. April 21st, 2004 (in
Phillips)
12. April 28th, 2004
13. May 5th, 2004
This page was last updated on Mon Nov 22 18:14:23 EST 2004