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Certain configurations of massive structures projected along the line of sight maximize the number of detections of gravitationally lensed $zsim10$ galaxies. We characterize such lines of sight with the etendue $sigma_mu$, the area in the source plane magnified over some threshold $mu$. We use the Millennium I and Millennium XXL cosmological simulations to determine the frequency of high $sigma_mu$ beams on the sky, their properties, and efficient selection criteria. We define the best beams as having $sigma_{mu>3} >2000$ arcsec$^2$, for a $zsim10$ source plane, and predict $477 pm 21$ such beams on the sky. The total mass in the beam and $sigma_{mu>3}$ are strongly correlated. After controlling for total mass, we find a significant residual correlation between $sigma_{mu>3}$ and the number of cluster-scale halos ($>10^{14} M_odot h^{-1}$) in the beam. Beams with $sigma_{mu>3} >2000$ arcsec$^2$, which should be best at lensing $zsim10$ galaxies, are ten times more likely to contain multiple cluster-scale halos than a single cluster-scale halo. Beams containing an Abell 1689-like massive cluster halo often have additional structures along the line of sight, including at least one additional cluster-scale ($M_{200}>10^{14}M_odot h^{-1}$) halo 28% of the time. Selecting beams with multiple, massive structures will lead to enhanced detection of the most distant and intrinsically faint galaxies.
We present the Millennium-II Simulation (MS-II), a very large N-body simulation of dark matter evolution in the concordance LCDM cosmology. The MS-II assumes the same cosmological parameters and uses the same particle number and output data structure
We have exploited the large-volume Millennium Gas cosmological N-body hydrodynamics simulations to study the SZ cluster population at low and high redshift, for three models with varying gas physics. We confirm previous results using smaller samples
We use the Delaunay Tessellation Field Estimator (DTFE) to study the one-point density distribution functions of the Millennium (MS) and Millennium-II (MS-II) simulations. The DTFE technique is based directly on the particle positions, without requir
There have been a number of studies dedicated to identification of fossil galaxy groups, arguably groups with a relatively old formation epoch. Most of such studies identify fossil groups, primarily based on a large luminosity gap, which is the magni
In this paper we investigate the strong lensing statistics in galaxy clusters. We extract dark matter haloes from the Millennium-XXL simulation, compute their Einstein radius distribution, and find a very good agreement with Monte Carlo predictions p