The Milky Way Galaxy as a Strong Gravitational Lens

Astronomy and Astrophysics – Astrophysics

Scientific paper

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MNRAS, in press

Scientific paper

10.1111/j.1365-2966.2006.11256.x

We study the gravitational lensing effects of spiral galaxies by taking a model of the Milky Way and computing its lensing properties. The model is composed of a spherical Hernquist bulge, a Miyamoto-Nagai disc and an isothermal halo. As a strong lens, a spiral galaxy like the Milky Way can give rise to four different imaging geometries. They are (i) three images on one side of the galaxy centre (`disc triplets'), (ii) three images with one close to the centre (`core triplets'), (iii) five images and (iv) seven images. Neglecting magnification bias, we show that the core triplets, disc triplets and fivefold imaging are roughly equally likely. Even though our models contain edge-on discs, their image multiplicities are not dominated by disc triplets. The halo has a small effect on the caustic structure, the time delays and brightnesses of the images. The Milky Way model has a maximum disc (i.e., the halo is not dynamically important in the inner parts). Strong lensing by nearly edge-on disc galaxies breaks the degeneracy between the relative contribution of the disc and halo to the overall rotation curve. If a spiral galaxy has a sub-maximum disc, then the astroid caustic shrinks dramatically in size, whilst the radial caustic shrinks more modestly. This causes changes in the relative likelihood of the image geometries, specifically (i) core triplets are now 9/2 times more likely than disc triplets, (ii) the cross section for threefold imaging is reduced by a factor of 2/3, whilst (iii) the cross section for fivefold imaging is reduced by 1/2. Although multiple imaging is less likely (the cross sections are smaller), the average total magnification is greater.

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