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The free streaming length of dark matter particles determines the abundance of structure on sub-galactic scales. We present a statistical technique, amendable to any parameterization of subhalo density profile and mass function, to probe dark matter on these scales with quadrupole image lenses. We consider a warm dark matter particle with a mass function characterized by a normalization and free streaming scale $m_{rm{hm}}$. We forecast bounds on dark matter warmth for 120-180 lenses, attainable with future surveys, at typical lens (source) redshifts of 0.5 (1.5) in early-type galaxies with velocity dispersions of 220-270 km/sec. We demonstrate that limits on $m_{rm{hm}}$ deteriorate rapidly with increasing uncertainty in image fluxes, underscoring the importance of precise measurements and accurate lens models. For our forecasts, we assume the deflectors in the lens sample do not exhibit complex morphologies, so we neglect systematic errors in their modeling. Omitting the additional signal from line of sight halos, our constraints underestimate the true power of the method. Assuming cold dark matter, for a low normalization, corresponding the destruction of all subhalos within the host scale radius, we forecast $2sigma$ bounds on $m_{rm{hm}}$ (thermal relic mass) of $10^{7.5} (5.0)$, $10^{8} (3.6)$, and $10^{8.5} (2.7) M_{odot} left(rm{keV}right)$ for flux errors of $2%$, $4%$, and $8%$. With a higher normalization, these constraints improve to $10^{7.2} (6.6)$, $10^{7.5} (5.3) $, and $10^{7.8} (4.3) M_{odot} left(rm{keV}right)$ with 120 systems. We are also able to measure the normalization of the mass function, which has implications for baryonic feedback models and tidal stripping.
I show that the lensing masses of the SLACS sample of strong gravitational lenses are consistent with the stellar masses determined from population synthesis models using the Salpeter IMF. This is true in the context of both General Relativity and mo
A fundamental prediction of the cold dark matter (CDM) model of structure formation is the existence of a vast population of dark matter haloes extending to subsolar masses. By contrast, other possibilities for the nature of the dark matter, such as
There is a vast menagerie of plausible candidates for the constituents of dark matter, both within and beyond extensions of the Standard Model of particle physics. Each of these candidates may have scattering (and other) cross section properties that
Joint analyses of small-scale cosmological structure probes are relatively unexplored and promise to advance measurements of microphysical dark matter properties using heterogeneous data. Here, we present a multidimensional analysis of dark matter su
A key prediction of the standard cosmological model -- which relies on the assumption that dark matter is cold, i.e. non-relativistic at the epoch of structure formation -- is the existence of a large number of dark matter substructures on sub-galact