论文标题
SlitRonomy:迈向完全小波的强透镜反转技术
SLITronomy: towards a fully wavelet-based strong lensing inversion technique
论文作者
论文摘要
强烈的引力镜头提供了有关星系的重子和暗物质含量的大量天体物理信息。它也可以通过允许我们独立于其他方法来测量哈勃恒定的恒定来作为宝贵的宇宙学探测器。这些应用程序都需要颠倒镜头方程的艰巨任务,并同时重建镜头的质量谱以及未透镜源的原始光谱。由于没有理由使镜头或源很简单,因此我们需要具有大量自由度的镜头方程的方法,也需要实施良好控制的正则化,以避免出现伪造结构。通过在小波空间中代表信号可以很好地完成这项功能。在稀疏镜头反转技术(SLIT)的基础上,在这项工作中,我们提出了一种基于稀疏性的方法,该方法使用小波来描述镜头源,并在给定分析镜头质量谱的情况下优化参数。我们将技术应用于模拟的HST和E-ELT数据,以及假设具有镜头模型的Sloan Lens ACS(SLAC)样品的实际HST镜头图像。我们表明,当使用当今的数据和未来30米级望远镜的当今数据和高分辨率图像时,您可以重建包含详细子结构的镜头源。此外,与使用结合平滑的分析配置文件和形状的源模型相比,小波在质量和计算时间方面提供了更容易理解的解决方案。我们的基于像素的技术几乎不需要人类的互动,这符合设计自动建模方案的努力。它可以将其纳入采样分析透镜模型参数的标准工作流程中。我们称之为slitronomy的方法可以作为建模软件镜头的新插件免费获得。
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), in this work 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 apply our technique on simulated HST and E-ELT data, as well as on real HST images of lenses from the Sloan Lens ACS (SLACS) sample, assuming a lens model. We show that wavelets allow us to reconstruct lensed sources containing detailed substructures when using both present-day data and high-resolution images from future thirty-meter-class telescopes. 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 pixel-based technique fits into the effort to devise automated modelling schemes. It can be incorporated in the standard workflow of sampling analytical lens model parameters. The method, which we call SLITronomy, is freely available as a new plug-in to the modelling software Lenstronomy.