On Arcs and Omega
Abstract
The gravitational lens effect of galaxy clusters can produce large arcs from source galaxies in their background. Typical source redshifts of ~ 1 require clusters at z ~ 0.3 for arcs to form efficiently. Given the cluster abundance at the present epoch, the fewer clusters exist at z ~ 0.3 the higher Omega0 is, because the formation epoch of galaxy clusters strongly depends on Omega0. In addition, at fixed Omega0, clusters are less concentrated, and hence less efficient lenses, when the cosmological constant is positive, OmegaLambda > 0. Numerical cluster simulations show that the expected number of arcs on the sky is indeed a sensitive function of Omega0 and OmegaLambda. The numerical results are compatible with the statistics of observed arcs only in a universe with low matter density, Omega0 ~ 0.3, and zero cosmological constant. Other models fail by one or two orders of magnitude, rendering arc statistics a sensitive probe for cosmological parameters.
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