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  4. SLITRONOMY: Towards a fully wavelet-based strong lensing inversion technique
 
research article

SLITRONOMY: Towards a fully wavelet-based strong lensing inversion technique

Galan, A.
•
Peel, A.
•
Joseph, R.
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March 31, 2021
Astronomy & Astrophysics

Strong gravitational lensing provides a wealth of astrophysical information on the baryonic and dark matter content of galaxies. It also serves as a valuable cosmological probe by allowing us to measure the Hubble constant independently of other methods. These applications all require the difficult task of inverting the lens equation and simultaneously reconstructing the mass profile of the lens along with the original light profile of the unlensed source. As there is no reason for either the lens or the source to be simple, we need methods that both invert the lens equation with a large number of degrees of freedom and also enforce a well-controlled regularisation that avoids the appearance of spurious structures. This can be beautifully accomplished by representing signals in wavelet space. Building on the Sparse Lens Inversion Technique (SLIT), we present an improved sparsity-based method that describes lensed sources using wavelets and optimises over the parameters given an analytical lens mass profile. We applied our technique on simulated HST and E-ELT data, as well as on real HST images of lenses from the Sloan Lens ACS sample, assuming a lens model. We show that wavelets allowed us to reconstruct lensed sources containing detailed substructures when using both present-day data and very high-resolution images expected from future thirty-metre-class telescopes. In the latter case, wavelets moreover provide a much more tractable solution in terms of quality and computation time compared to using a source model that combines smooth analytical profiles and shapelets. Requiring very little human interaction, our flexible pixel-based technique fits into the ongoing effort to devise automated modelling schemes. It can be incorporated in the standard workflow of sampling analytical lens model parameters while modelling the source on a pixelated grid. The method, which we call SLITRONOMY, is freely available as a new plug-in to the modelling software LENSTRONOMY.

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1051/0004-6361/202039363
Web of Science ID

WOS:000636755100001

Author(s)
Galan, A.
Peel, A.
Joseph, R.
Courbin, F.  
Starck, J. -L.
Date Issued

2021-03-31

Publisher

EDP SCIENCES S A

Published in
Astronomy & Astrophysics
Volume

647

Article Number

A176

Subjects

Astronomy & Astrophysics

•

gravitation

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gravitational lensing: strong

•

methods: data analysis

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techniques: image processing

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galaxies: high-redshift

•

galaxies: structure

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strong gravitational lenses

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early-type galaxies

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einstein ring-0047-2808

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dark-matter

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acs survey

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mass

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substructure

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models

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reconstruction

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decomposition

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LASTRO  
Available on Infoscience
June 19, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/179210
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